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Lecithins from Vegetable, Land, and Marine Animal Sources and Their Potential Applications for Cosmetic, Food, and Pharmaceutical Sectors

Maria J. Alhajj, Nicolle Montero, Cristhian J. Yarce, Constaín H. Salamanca

2020Cosmetics93 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The aim of this work was to review the reported information about the phospholipid composition of lecithins derived from several natural sources (lipids of plant, animal, and marine origin) and describe their main applications for the cosmetic, food, and pharmaceutical sectors. This study was carried out using specialized search engines and according to the following inclusion criteria: (i) documents published between 2005 and 2020, (ii) sources of lecithins, (iii) phospholipidic composition of lecithins, and (iv) uses and applications of lecithins. Nevertheless, this work is presented as a narrative review. Results of the review indicated that the most studied source of lecithin is soybean, followed by sunflower and egg yolk. Contrarily, only a few numbers of reports focused on lecithins derived from marine animals despite the relevance of this source in association with an even higher composition of phospholipids than in case of those derived from plant sources. Finally, the main applications of lecithins were found to be related to their nutritional aspects and ability as emulsion stabilizers and lipid component of liposomes.

Topics & Concepts

LecithinComposition (language)ChemistryBiochemical engineeringFood scienceBiotechnologyBiologyChromatographyPhilosophyEngineeringLinguisticsPhytochemicals and Antioxidant ActivitiesNatural Antidiabetic Agents StudiesFatty Acid Research and Health
Lecithins from Vegetable, Land, and Marine Animal Sources and Their Potential Applications for Cosmetic, Food, and Pharmaceutical Sectors | Litcius