Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5133083 Food Chemistry 2018 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Spray-dried lactase powder was encapsulated in S/O/W emulsions with 75% efficiency.•Transglutaminase treatment and caseinate reduced free lactase after freeze-drying.•Capsules were stable in milk and hydrolyzed lactose by <15% after 3 weeks.•Capsules reduced the deactivation of lactase during simulated digestions.•Encapsulation improved the hydrolysis of lactose in milk during in vitro digestions.

The objective of this work was to study solid/oil/water (S/O/W) emulsions as delivery systems with retained lactase in milk and controlled release during in vitro digestion. Spray-dried lactase powder was suspended in anhydrous milk fat/Span® 80 emulsified by sodium caseinate and lecithin (5:1). The S/O/W emulsion had an encapsulation efficiency of 75%, a hydrodynamic diameter of 292 nm, and a zeta potential of −17.37 mV. Cross-linking the dialyzed emulsion with transglutaminase eliminated the detection of free lactase after freeze-drying emulsions and the addition of sodium caseinate further preserved lactase activity. The hydrolysis of lactose in full-fat or skim milk after 3-week storage reduced from >75% for free lactase to <15% for encapsulated lactase. The encapsulated lactase was released gradually during the simulated digestions to hydrolyze lactose in milk more efficiently than free lactase. The present findings suggest S/O/W emulsions are potential delivery systems to incorporate lactase in milk products.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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