Litcius/Paper detail

Mucilages: sources, extraction methods, and characteristics for their use as encapsulation agents

Roji Waghmare, R. Preethi, J.A. Moses, C. Anandharamakrishnan

2021Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition63 citationsDOI

Abstract

The increasing interest in the use of natural ingredients has driven keen research and commercial interest in the use of mucilages for a range of applications. Typically, mucilages are polysaccharide hydrocolloids with distinct physicochemical and structural diversity, possessing characteristic functional and health benefits. Apart from their role as binding, thickening, stabilizing, and humidifying agents, they are valued for their antimicrobial, antihypertensive, antioxidant, antiasthmatic, hypoglycemic, and hypolipidemic activities. The focus of this review is to present the range of mucilages that have been explored as encapsulating agents. Encapsulation of food ingredients, nutraceutical, and pharmaceutical ingredients is an attractive technique to enhance the stability of targeted compounds, apart from providing benefits on delivery characteristics. The most widely adopted conventional and emerging extraction and purification methods are explained and supplemented with information on the key criteria involved in characterizing the physicochemical and functional properties of mucilages. The unique traits and benefits of using mucilages as encapsulation agents are detailed with the different methods used by researchers to encapsulate different food and bioactive compounds.

Topics & Concepts

MucilageNutraceuticalNatural polymersFood industryHealth benefitsActive ingredientBiochemical engineeringChemistryFunctional foodEncapsulation (networking)BiotechnologyNanotechnologyFood scienceTraditional medicineMaterials sciencePharmacologyPolymerComputer scienceMedicineBiologyBotanyOrganic chemistryComputer networkEngineeringPolysaccharides and Plant Cell WallsPolysaccharides Composition and ApplicationsMicroencapsulation and Drying Processes