AI Article Synopsis

  • Natural pigments are natural colorants with health benefits, but their instability under factors like light and heat leads to the need for complexation with biopolymers for better stability and solubility.
  • Techniques for creating these natural pigment-biopolymer complexes have evolved, showing improvements in thermal and storage stability, but research on their biological effects and sensory acceptance in foods is limited.
  • Understanding the thermodynamic interactions between natural pigments and biopolymers is crucial for effective complex formation, and this review discusses recent advances and challenges in this field.

Article Abstract

Natural pigments are bioactive compounds that can present health-promoting bioactivities in the human body. Due to their strong coloring properties, these compounds have been widely used as color additives as an alternative to artificial colorants. However, since these pigments are unstable under certain conditions, such as the presence of light, oxygen, and heat, the use of complexation and encapsulation techniques with biopolymers is in demand. Moreover, some functional properties can be achieved by using natural pigments-biopolymers complexes in food matrices. The complexation and encapsulation of natural pigments with biopolymers consist of forming a complex with the aim to make these compounds less susceptible to oxidative and degrading agents, and can also be used to improve their solubility in different media. This review aims to discuss different techniques that have been used over the last years to create natural pigment-biopolymers complexes, as well as the recent advances, limitations, effects, and possible applications of these complexes in foods. Moreover, the understanding of thermodynamic parameters between natural pigments and biopolymers is very important regarding the complex formation and their use in food systems. In this sense, thermodynamic techniques that can be used to determine binding parameters between natural pigments and potential wall materials, as well as their applications, advantages, and limitations are presented in this work. Several studies have shown an improvement in many aspects regarding the use of these complexes, including increased thermal and storage stability. Nonetheless, data regarding the biological effects on the human body and the sensory acceptance of natural pigments-biopolymers complexes in food systems are scarce in the literature.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodres.2022.112277DOI Listing

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