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Self-Assembled Egg Yolk Peptide Micellar Nanoparticles as a Versatile Emulsifier for Food-Grade Oil-in-Water Pickering Nanoemulsions
Pickering emulsions stabilized by food-grade particles have garnered increasing interest in recent years due to their promising applications in biorelated fields such as foods, cosmetics, and drug delivery. However, it remains a big challenge to formulate nanoscale Pickering emulsions from these edi...
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Published in: | Journal of agricultural and food chemistry 2019-10, Vol.67 (42), p.11728-11740 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Pickering emulsions stabilized by food-grade particles have garnered increasing interest in recent years due to their promising applications in biorelated fields such as foods, cosmetics, and drug delivery. However, it remains a big challenge to formulate nanoscale Pickering emulsions from these edible particles. Herein we show that a new Pickering nanoemulsion that is stable, monodisperse, and controllable can be produced by employing the spherical micellar nanoparticles (EYPNs), self-assembled from the food-derived, amphiphilic egg yolk peptides, as an edible particulate emulsifier. As natural peptide-based nanoparticles, the EYPNs have a small particle size, intermediate wettability, high surface activity, and deformability at the interface, which enable the formation of stable Pickering nanodroplets with a mean dynamic light scattering diameter below 200 nm and a polydispersity index below 0.2. This nanoparticle system is versatile for different oil phases with various polarities and demonstrates the easy control of nanodroplet size through tuning the microfluidization conditions or the ratio of EYPNs to oil phase. These food-grade Pickering nanoemulsions, obtained when the internal phase is an edible vegetable oil, have superior stability during long-term storage and spray-drying based on the irreversible and compact adsorption of intact EYPNs at the nanodroplet surface. This is the first finding of a natural edible nano-Pickering emulsifier that can be used solely to make stable food Pickering nanoemulsions with the qualities of simplicity, versatility, low cost, and the possibility of controllable and mass production, which make them viable for many sustainable applications. |
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ISSN: | 0021-8561 1520-5118 |
DOI: | 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b04595 |