Publication | Open Access
Microencapsulation of astaxanthin by ionic gelation: effect of different gelling polymers on the carotenoid load, stability and bioaccessibility
21
Citations
34
References
2023
Year
Food ChemistryBiopolymer GelChemical EngineeringMixed BiopolymersEngineeringNatural PolymerBiotechnologyBio-based MaterialMicro-encapsulationSummary AstaxanthinBiopolymersIonic GelationCarotenoid LoadEncapsulation PerformancePolymer ChemistrySol-gel Synthesis
Summary Astaxanthin (ASX) is a carotenoid characterised by numerous health‐promoting properties but biased by scarce chemical stability. Our aim was to microencapsulate ASX through ionic gelation to improve its stability and bioaccessibility, evaluating the performance of low‐methoxyl pectin (LMP) and chitosan, besides the most common alginate. Three formulations were tested: 3% pectin (Pec), 3% pectin + chitosan shell (PecChi) and 1.5% alginate—1.5% LMP + chitosan shell. The results showed that chitosan deposited onto PecAlChi and PecChi beads improved particle sphericity and limited oil oxidation during processing. PecAlChi provided the highest encapsulation efficiency (87%) and bioaccessibility (58%). The stability test at 65°C × 24 days showed different polymer‐dependent degradation kinetics, with PecChi providing the highest stability (48%). In conclusion, encapsulation performance strongly depended on the chitosan shell and the gelling polymers. This suggests that tuning the alginate/pectin ratio may lead to the best compromise between stability and bioaccessibility.
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