Encapsulated Pine Bark Polyphenolic Extract during Gastrointestinal Digestion: Bioaccessibility, Bioactivity and Oxidative Stress Prevention.
Pedro Ferreira-SantosRaquel IbarzJean-Michel FernandesAna Cristina PinheiroCláudia BotelhoCristina M R RochaJosé António TeixeiraOlga Martin-BellosoPublished in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
Polyphenolic extracts from pine bark have reported different biological actions and promising beneficial effects on human health. However, its susceptibility to environmental stresses (temperature, storage, etc.) and physiological human conditions prequires the development of efficient protection mechanisms to allow effective delivering of functionality. The aim of this work was to encapsulate pine bark extract rich phenolic compounds by spray-drying using maltodextrin, and understand the influence of encapsulation on the antioxidant and antimicrobial activity and bioaccessibility of phenolic compounds during gastrointestinal digestion. The optimized process conditions allowed good encapsulation efficiency of antioxidant phenolic compounds. The microencapsulation was effective in protecting those compounds during gastrointestinal conditions, controlling their delivery and enhancing its health benefits, decreasing the production of reactive oxygen species implicated in the process of oxidative stress associated with some pathologies. Finally, this encapsulation system was able to protect these extracts against acidic matrices, making the system suitable for the nutritional enrichment of fermented foods or fruit-based beverages, providing them antimicrobial protection, because the encapsulated extract was effective against Listeria innocua. Overall, the designed system allowed protecting and appropriately delivering the active compounds, and may find potential application as a natural preservative and/or antioxidant in food formulations or as bioactive ingredient with controlled delivery in pharmaceuticals or nutraceuticals.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- human health
- risk assessment
- climate change
- diabetic rats
- anti inflammatory
- dna damage
- reactive oxygen species
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- heavy metals
- health risk assessment
- staphylococcus aureus
- public health
- healthcare
- mental health
- signaling pathway
- anaerobic digestion
- heat shock
- social media
- drinking water
- heat stress
- listeria monocytogenes