Cargando…

The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods

Poor water solubility and low bioavailability of hydrophobic flavonoids such as rutin remain as substantial challenges to their oral delivery via functional foods. In this study, the effect of pH and the addition of a protein (sodium caseinate; NaCas) on the aqueous solubility and stability of rutin...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Rashidinejad, Ali, Jameson, Geoffrey B., Singh, Harjinder
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8781550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35056844
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27020534
_version_ 1784638105681133568
author Rashidinejad, Ali
Jameson, Geoffrey B.
Singh, Harjinder
author_facet Rashidinejad, Ali
Jameson, Geoffrey B.
Singh, Harjinder
author_sort Rashidinejad, Ali
collection PubMed
description Poor water solubility and low bioavailability of hydrophobic flavonoids such as rutin remain as substantial challenges to their oral delivery via functional foods. In this study, the effect of pH and the addition of a protein (sodium caseinate; NaCas) on the aqueous solubility and stability of rutin was studied, from which an efficient delivery system for the incorporation of rutin into functional food products was developed. The aqueous solubility, chemical stability, crystallinity, and morphology of rutin (0.1–5% w/v) under various pH (1–11) and protein concentrations (0.2–8% w/v) were studied. To manufacture the concentrated colloidally stable rutin–NaCas particles, rutin was dissolved and deprotonated in a NaCas solution at alkaline pH before its subsequent neutralisation at pH 7. The excess water was removed using ultrafiltration to improve the loading capacity. Rutin showed the highest solubility at pH 11, while the addition of NaCas resulted in the improvement of both solubility and chemical stability. Critically, to achieve particles with colloidal stability, the NaCas:rutin ratio (w/w) had to be greater than 2.5 and 40 respectively for the lowest (0.2% w/v) and highest (4 to 8% w/v) concentrations of NaCas. The rutin–NaCas particles in the concentrated formulations were physically stable, with a size in the range of 185 to 230 nm and zeta potential of −36.8 to −38.1 mV, depending on the NaCas:rutin ratio. Encapsulation efficiency and loading capacity of rutin in different systems were 76% to 83% and 2% to 22%, respectively. The concentrated formulation containing 5% w/v NaCas and 2% w/v rutin was chosen as the most efficient delivery system due to the ideal protein:flavonoid ratio (2.5:1), which resulted in the highest loading capacity (22%). Taken together, the findings show that the delivery system developed in this study can be a promising method for the incorporation of a high concentration of hydrophobic flavonoids such as rutin into functional foods.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-8781550
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-87815502022-01-22 The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods Rashidinejad, Ali Jameson, Geoffrey B. Singh, Harjinder Molecules Article Poor water solubility and low bioavailability of hydrophobic flavonoids such as rutin remain as substantial challenges to their oral delivery via functional foods. In this study, the effect of pH and the addition of a protein (sodium caseinate; NaCas) on the aqueous solubility and stability of rutin was studied, from which an efficient delivery system for the incorporation of rutin into functional food products was developed. The aqueous solubility, chemical stability, crystallinity, and morphology of rutin (0.1–5% w/v) under various pH (1–11) and protein concentrations (0.2–8% w/v) were studied. To manufacture the concentrated colloidally stable rutin–NaCas particles, rutin was dissolved and deprotonated in a NaCas solution at alkaline pH before its subsequent neutralisation at pH 7. The excess water was removed using ultrafiltration to improve the loading capacity. Rutin showed the highest solubility at pH 11, while the addition of NaCas resulted in the improvement of both solubility and chemical stability. Critically, to achieve particles with colloidal stability, the NaCas:rutin ratio (w/w) had to be greater than 2.5 and 40 respectively for the lowest (0.2% w/v) and highest (4 to 8% w/v) concentrations of NaCas. The rutin–NaCas particles in the concentrated formulations were physically stable, with a size in the range of 185 to 230 nm and zeta potential of −36.8 to −38.1 mV, depending on the NaCas:rutin ratio. Encapsulation efficiency and loading capacity of rutin in different systems were 76% to 83% and 2% to 22%, respectively. The concentrated formulation containing 5% w/v NaCas and 2% w/v rutin was chosen as the most efficient delivery system due to the ideal protein:flavonoid ratio (2.5:1), which resulted in the highest loading capacity (22%). Taken together, the findings show that the delivery system developed in this study can be a promising method for the incorporation of a high concentration of hydrophobic flavonoids such as rutin into functional foods. MDPI 2022-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC8781550/ /pubmed/35056844 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27020534 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Rashidinejad, Ali
Jameson, Geoffrey B.
Singh, Harjinder
The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods
title The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods
title_full The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods
title_fullStr The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods
title_short The Effect of pH and Sodium Caseinate on the Aqueous Solubility, Stability, and Crystallinity of Rutin towards Concentrated Colloidally Stable Particles for the Incorporation into Functional Foods
title_sort effect of ph and sodium caseinate on the aqueous solubility, stability, and crystallinity of rutin towards concentrated colloidally stable particles for the incorporation into functional foods
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8781550/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35056844
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27020534
work_keys_str_mv AT rashidinejadali theeffectofphandsodiumcaseinateontheaqueoussolubilitystabilityandcrystallinityofrutintowardsconcentratedcolloidallystableparticlesfortheincorporationintofunctionalfoods
AT jamesongeoffreyb theeffectofphandsodiumcaseinateontheaqueoussolubilitystabilityandcrystallinityofrutintowardsconcentratedcolloidallystableparticlesfortheincorporationintofunctionalfoods
AT singhharjinder theeffectofphandsodiumcaseinateontheaqueoussolubilitystabilityandcrystallinityofrutintowardsconcentratedcolloidallystableparticlesfortheincorporationintofunctionalfoods
AT rashidinejadali effectofphandsodiumcaseinateontheaqueoussolubilitystabilityandcrystallinityofrutintowardsconcentratedcolloidallystableparticlesfortheincorporationintofunctionalfoods
AT jamesongeoffreyb effectofphandsodiumcaseinateontheaqueoussolubilitystabilityandcrystallinityofrutintowardsconcentratedcolloidallystableparticlesfortheincorporationintofunctionalfoods
AT singhharjinder effectofphandsodiumcaseinateontheaqueoussolubilitystabilityandcrystallinityofrutintowardsconcentratedcolloidallystableparticlesfortheincorporationintofunctionalfoods