Biology and Life Sciences Forum (Sep 2023)

An Oxidative Stability Study of Amylose-Hydrolyzed Chia Oil Inclusion Complexes Using the Rancimat Method

  • Andrea E. Di Marco,
  • Vanesa Y. Ixtaina,
  • Mabel C. Tomás

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/blsf2023025011
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 25, no. 1
p. 11

Abstract

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Chia oil is a source of α-linolenic (omega-3) fatty acid, which is known to promote human health but is highly prone to oxidation. Amylose (a polymer of α-1,4 D-glucose units) can molecularly encapsulate hydrophobic molecules, forming inclusion complexes that could potentially allow the incorporation of sensitive bioactive substances into functional foods. The evaluation of their oxidative stability is relevant to understand their behavior as delivery systems, but monitoring this parameter under real storage conditions requires long periods. In the present work, the oxidative stability of amylose-hydrolyzed chia oil inclusion complexes at 25 °C was estimated from the extrapolation of the exponential dependence of the Rancimat induction times determined at different temperatures (70–98 °C). The complexes were formed with high amylose corn starch and enzymatically hydrolyzed chia oil (10% or 20% hydrolysate/starch), with and without crystallization, using the KOH/HCl method followed by freeze-drying. The spectra of attenuated total reflectance Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy revealed typical bands that confirmed the effective retention of chia oil fatty acids by the starch structure. The scanning electron micrographs showed that these samples were formed by irregular and porous solid particles. The induction time at 25 °C of crystallized complexes decreased with an increasing hydrolysate content, while the opposite was observed in non-crystallized complexes, as those formed with 20% hydrolysate were the ones that showed the highest stability. Although these findings should be confirmed under real storage conditions, the Rancimat results could be considered as a preliminary quick prediction of the behavior of inclusion complexes as carriers of omega-3 fatty acids.

Keywords