Application of ultrasound and microencapsulation on Limosilactobacillus reuteri DSM 17938 as a metabolic attenuation strategy for tomato juice probiotication
Publication Type
Original research
Authors

Counteracting probiotic-induced physicochemical and sensory changes is a challenge in the development of probiotic beverages. The aim of the study is to apply ultrasound and microencapsulation for the attenuation of Limosilactobacillus reuteri DSM 17938 to avoid change in a probiotic tomato juice. Preliminarily, six ultrasound treatments were applied. Probiotic survival in acid environment (pH 2.5) and bile salts (1.5 g/l) after ultrasound treatment was also studied. The probiotic was inoculated in tomato juice in four forms: free cells (PRO-TJ), sonicated-free cells (US-TJ), untreated-microencapsulated (PRO-MC-TJ) and sonicated-microencapsulated cells (US-MC-TJ). Probiotic viability and pH were monitored during 28 days of storage at 4 and 20 C. Sensory analysis was performed for PRO-TJ and US-MC-TJ sample (4 C). Ultrasound (57 W for 6 min) did not affect cell survival and transitorily modulated probiotic acidifying capacity; it reduced probiotic survival in acidic environment but increased probiotic survival in bile salts solution. Ultrasound was effective in maintain pH value of tomato juice but only at 4 C. Instead, microencapsulation with sodium-alginate leads to a more stable probiotic juice, particularly at 20 C. Finally, probiotication slightly modified some sensory attributes of the juice. This study shows the potential of ultrasound and microencapsulation as attenuation strategies and highlights the need for process optimization to increase ultrasound efficacy

Journal
Title
Heliyon
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher Country
United States of America
Indexing
Scopus
Impact Factor
3.77
Publication Type
Both (Printed and Online)
Volume
8
Year
2022
Pages
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