4 research outputs found

    Functional characterization of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) nanohydrogels for the controlled release of food preservatives

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    In most active packaging systems for food applications, the preservative release is uncontrolled and frequently ineffective due to excessive or insufficient preservative concentration in the food matrix at a particular time. This work was aimed to evaluate the usefulness of pH- and temperature-sensitive poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) nanohydrogels for developing smart delivery systems to release preservatives as a response to environmental triggers. Pimaricin was used as a model preservative. Loading and release efficiencies were studied as a function of incorporation time and nanohydrogels composition, that differed in the cross-linker and acrylic acid content. Pimaricin loading efficiency was not affected by the acrylic acid. However, the cross-linking degree and incorporation time had a great influence. The lower the cross-linker content, the higher the loading efficiency, which in all cases exceeded 70 % at 12 h, approaching 100 % after 60 h of incorporation. No significant differences were observed between loading efficiencies obtained using water or methanol for pimaricin solubilisation. On the other hand, pimaricin release was dependent on the gel collapse, determined by the gel composition. Increasing the cross-linker content enhanced the nanoparticles' rigidity, and inclusion of acrylic acid as comonomer promoted strong electrostatic repulsions among the polymer chains. In both cases, the collapse was hampered, leading to a more hydrated collapsed state that favoured a sustained release of pimaricin. A mathematical model was also developed to predict the pimaricin release as a function of pH, temperature and storage time, allowing to select the most suitable nanohydrogel for a specific food application.This work was funded by grant (MAT 2006-11662-CO3-CO2-C01/MAT 2010-21509-C03-01/EUI 2008-00115) from the "Ministerio de Educacion y Ciencia" (Spain). Clara Fucinos gratefully acknowledge her Pos-Doctoral grant (SFRH/BPD/87910/2012) to the Fundacao para a Ciencia e Tecnologia (FCT, Portugal)

    Biotechnological production and application of the antibiotic pimaricin: biosynthesis and its regulation

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    Pimaricin (natamycin) is a small polyene macrolide antibiotic used worldwide. This efficient antimycotic and antiprotozoal agent, produced by several soil bacterial species of the genus Streptomyces, has found application in human therapy, in the food and beverage industries and as pesticide. It displays a broad spectrum of activity, targeting ergosterol but bearing a particular mode of action different to other polyene macrolides. The biosynthesis of this only antifungal agent with a GRAS status has been thoroughly studied, which has permitted the manipulation of producers to engineer the biosynthetic gene clusters in order to generate several analogues. Regulation of its production has been largely unveiled, constituting a model for other polyenes and setting the leads for optimizing the production of these valuable compounds. This review describes and discusses the molecular genetics, uses, mode of action, analogue generation, regulation and strategies for increasing pimaricin production yields

    Outbreaks of listeriosis associated with deli meats and cheese: an overview

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