Oxidative Stability of Fish Oil-Loaded Nanocapsules Produced by Electrospraying Using Kafirin or Zein Proteins as Wall Materials
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Rahmani Manglano, Nor Elena; Z. Fallahasghari, Elnaz; Mendes, Ana C.; L. Andersen, Mogens; Guadix Escobar, Emilia María; S. Chronakis, Ioannis; García Moreno, Pedro JesúsEditorial
MDPI
Materia
lipid oxidation omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids encapsulation
Fecha
2024-09-23Referencia bibliográfica
Rahmani Manglano, N.E. et. al. Antioxidants 2024, 13, 1145. [https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox13091145]
Patrocinador
2023 Leonardo Grant for Researchers and Cultural Creators, BBVA Foundation; Technical University of Denmark; FOODHAY (Food and Health Open Innovation Laboratory, Danish Roadmap for Research Infrastructure)Resumen
The encapsulation of fish oil by monoaxial electrospraying using kafirin or zein proteins
as hydrophobic wall materials was investigated. Kafirin resulted in spherical fish oil-loaded
nanocapsules (>50% of capsules below 1 μm), whereas zein led to fish oil-loaded nanocapsules
with non-spherical morphology (>80% of capsules below 1 μm). Both hydrophobic encapsulating
materials interacted with fish oil, successfully entrapping the oil within the protein matrix as indicated
by Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and Raman spectroscopy results. FTIR also
suggested hydrogen bonding between fish oil and the proteins. Trapped radicals in the encapsulation
matrix that were detected by electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), indicated oxidation during
electrospraying and storage. Results from isothermal (140 ◦C) differential scanning calorimetry
(DSC) denoted that the encapsulation of fish oil by electrospraying using both kafirin or zein as wall
materials protected fish oil from oxidation. In particular, the zein-based nanocapsules were 3.3 times
more oxidatively stable than the kafirin-based nanocapsules, which correlates with the higher oil
encapsulation efficiency found for zein-based capsules. Thus, this study shows that kafirin might be
considered a hydrophobic wall material for the encapsulation of fish oil by electrospraying, although
it prevented lipid oxidation to a lower extent when compared to zein.