Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10543991 | Food Chemistry | 2005 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Lutein has been identified by various studies as a dietary compound that may help delay the onset of macular degeneration. Random centroid optimization was applied to design, prepare and characterize lutein-enriched oil-in-water (o/w) emulsions containing corn oil (15-25%), whey proteins (1.5-3.5%), phosphatidylglycerol (0.03-0.3%), KC1 (80-100 mM), lutein (0.025-0.031%), and pH at 3.8-4.8. After nine experiments in the first random cycle and four experiments in the centroid cycle, optimal conditions for the preparation of stable lutein-enriched oil-in-water emulsion were: corn oil, 20%; whey proteins, 2%; phosphatidylglycerol, 0.157%; KCl, 93.7 mM; lutein, 0.0282%, and pH 4.55. The half life stability, stability index, and zeta potential values for freshly prepared emulsions were higher when stabilized with phosphatidylglycerol than with phosphatidylcholine. Phosphatidylcholine-stabilized emulsions collapsed after heating at 90 °C for 5 min. Emulsion parameters for phosphatidylglycerol-stabilized emulsions heated at 90 °C for 5 min or stored at 4 °C for 24 h were not significantly different from values obtained with freshly prepared emulsions. Lutein remained stable in fresh and heat-treated emulsions. The potential of phosphatidylglycerol and lutein as health enhancing bioactive compounds is discussed.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Chemistry
Analytical Chemistry
Authors
Jack N. Losso, Armen Khachatryan, Masahiro Ogawa, J. Sam Godber, Fred Shih,