Title of article :
Preliminary study of the influence of dietary fiber on the properties of oil-in-water emulsions passing through an in vitro human digestion model
Author/Authors :
Maud Beysseriat، نويسنده , , Eric A. Decker، نويسنده , , D. Julian McClements، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2006
Pages :
10
From page :
800
To page :
809
Abstract :
The objective of this preliminary study was to obtain a better understanding of the influence of dietary fiber on the digestibility of emulsified lipids. The influence of fiber type (pectin and chitosan), fiber concentration (0–0.5 wt%), and fiber molecular weight (15 and 2500 kDa chitosan) was examined on the ζ-potential, particle size and creaming stability of 5 wt% corn oil-in-water emulsions (1 wt% Tween 80) subjected to an in vitro digestion model (pH∼7, 1 h; pH∼2, 1 h; pH∼5.3,+bile salts, 2 h; pH∼7.5, 2 h: 37 °C). In the absence of dietary fiber, the emulsion droplets were anionic and remained stable to aggregation throughout the digestion model. Anionic pectin did not adsorb to the anionic droplet surfaces at any pH, but it promoted extensive droplet flocculation through a depletion mechanism. Cationic chitosan adsorbed to the droplet surfaces at some pH values and promoted droplet flocculation through a bridging mechanism. For example, at pH 5.3, the electrical charge for the emulsion containing 0.5 wt% chitosan (MW=2500 kDa) was highly cationic (ζ≈+19 mV), whereas it was anionic (ζ≈−12 mV) for the emulsion containing no chitosan, which indicated that chitosan bound to the droplet surfaces. On the other hand, low molecular weight chitosan (15 kDa) did not absorb to the droplet surfaces under the same conditions. These results may have important implications for understanding the influence of dietary fibers on lipid digestion, since they show that chitosan is able to bind to the droplet surfaces and pectin is able to promote droplet aggregation, which may decrease the access of digestive enzymes to the lipids, and therefore, decrease lipid digestion. This study could therefore be used to create food emulsions with low caloric level, or to optimize diets for individuals with lipid digestion problems.
Keywords :
Emulsions , Digestion , Fiber , Bile salts , Lipid adsorption , Flocculation
Journal title :
Food Hydrocolloids
Serial Year :
2006
Journal title :
Food Hydrocolloids
Record number :
978135
Link To Document :
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