INVESTIGADORES
GOMEZ ZAVAGLIA Andrea
artículos
Título:
Microencapsulation of Lactobacillus plantarum in W/O emulsions of okara oil and block-copolymers of poly(acrylic acid) and pluronic using microfluidic devices
Autor/es:
QUINTANA, GABRIEL; GERBINO, ESTEBAN; ALVES, PATRICIA; NUNO SIMÕES, PEDRO; LUISA RÚA, MARÍA; FUCIÑOS, CLARA; GOMEZ-ZAVAGLIA, ANDREA
Revista:
FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL
Editorial:
ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
Referencias:
Año: 2021
ISSN:
0963-9969
Resumen:
Okara oil is a by-product remaining from defatting okara, the solid residue generated after extracting the aqueous fraction of grounded soybeans in the elaboration of soy beverages. The goal of this work was to encapsulate the probiotic Lactobacillus plantarum CIDCA 83114 into W/O emulsions composed of a block-copolymer constituted of pluronic® and acrylic acid (PPP12) and okara oil, prepared in microfluidic devices. For comparative purposes, alginate was also included as a second dispersed phase. Lactobacillus plantarum CIDCA 83114 was suspended in PPP12 or alginate giving rise to dispersed phases with different compositions, named I, II, III and IV. Controls were prepared by suspending microorganisms in water as dispersed phase. 6-carboxyfluorescein was added as bacterial marker in all the emulsions. The presence of green dyed bacteria in the dispersed phases, inside the droplets of the emulsions and the absence of fluorescence outside them, confirmed the complete encapsulation of bacteria in the dispersed phases. After being prepared, emulsions were freeze-dried. The exposure to gastric conditions did not lead to significant differences among the emulsions containing polymers. However, in all cases bacterial counts were significantly lower than those of the control. After exposing emulsions to the simulated intestinal environment, bacterial counts in assays I, II and III (emulsions composed of only one dispersed phase or of two dispersed phases with bacteria resuspended in the PPP12 one) were significantly greater than those of the control (p