Impact of Phospholipids and Tocopherols on the Oxidative
Stability of Soybean Oil-in-Water Emulsions
Posted on 2018-04-06 - 20:46
Phospholipids
have been shown to act synergistically with tocopherols
and delay lipid oxidation in bulk oil. The synergistic activity between
phospholipids and tocopherols is due to the ability of amino-group-containing
phospholipids (e.g., phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) and phosphatidylserine
(PS)) to convert oxidized tocopherol back into tocopherols. This study
shows the effect of PE and PS on the antioxidant activity of different
tocopherol homologues in oil-in-water emulsions. Effect of emulsifier
type on the interaction between tocopherols and phospholipids was
also studied. δ-Tocopherol and PE exhibited greater antioxidant
activity as compared to α-tocopherol and PE. PS displayed 1.5–3
times greater synergism than PE with Tween 20 as emulsifier whereas
both PE and PS had a similar antioxidant activity in the presence
of α-tocopherol when bovine serum albumin was used as the emulsifier.
This study is the first to show that PE and PS can act synergistically
with tocopherols to inhibit lipid oxidation in oil-in-water emulsions
and can present a new clean label antioxidant strategy for food emulsions.
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Samdani, Gautam
K.; McClements, D. Julian; Decker, Eric A. (2018). Impact of Phospholipids and Tocopherols on the Oxidative
Stability of Soybean Oil-in-Water Emulsions. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.8b00677