Preparation of Phosphatidylcholine Nanovesicles Containing Bacteriocin CAMT2 and Their Anti-listerial Activity

Publication date: Available online 18 January 2020Source: Food ChemistryAuthor(s): Dongdong Jiao, Ying Liu, Ying Liu, Ruchun Zeng, Xiaoqin Hou, Guochao Nie, Lijun Sun, Zhijia FangAbstractA novel bacteriocin CAMT2, produced by Bacillus amyloliquefaciens ZJHD3-06, has potential as a natural biopreservative for the control of food-borne spoilage and pathogenic bacteria. To avoid interaction of CAMT2 with components of food that may adversely impact its antibacterial activity, CAMT2 was encapsulated into nanovesicles prepared from soybean phosphatidylcholine. The encapsulation of CAMT2 exhibited a limited impact on functional structure and crystallinity of bacteriocin CAMT2, but a high anti-listerial activity in agar, and increase its stability in food at refrigeration temperature (4 °C). The results also showed that both encapsulated and free CAMT2 had good anti-listerial effect in skim milk at refrigeration temperature. However, encapsulated CAMT2 performed better than free CAMT2 against Listeria in whole milk. These results showed that nano-encapsulation is an effective method of protecting bacteriocin from fat in milk and retaining its antimicrobial efficacy.
Source: Food Chemistry - Category: Food Science Source Type: research