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Effect of milk proteins and food-grade surfactants on oxidation of linseed oil-in-water emulsions during in vitro digestion Texto completo
2019
Lamothe, Sophie | Desroches, Vincent | Britten, Michel
Health benefits are associated with polyunsaturated fatty acids, but their sensitivity to oxidation may generate toxic oxidation species. The objective of this study was to compare the effect of milk proteins (casein, whey protein) and surfactants (Citrem, Tween 20) on the in vitro digestion and oxidation of linseed oil emulsions. The emulsion produced with Tween 20 resisted coalescence in the gastric phase and showed the highest concentrations of free fatty acids and reactive carbonyl compounds in the intestinal digestion phase. The Citrem-stabilized emulsion showed extensive coalescence in the gastric environment, which reduced lipolysis and the formation of advanced oxidation species. The protein-stabilized emulsions showed aggregation with some coalescence in the gastric phase, and casein provided better protection than whey protein against oxidation. This study suggests that the mechanism of emulsion destabilization in the gastric environment and the type of protein can modulate lipolysis and oxidation during in vitro digestion.
Mostrar más [+] Menos [-]Food Conditions and Water Salinity Affect Survival and Growth of Golden Mandarin Fish, Siniperca sherzeri, Larvae through Transcriptional Regulation of Growth and Lipometabolic Genes Texto completo
2018
Yuan, Xiao‐Chen | He, Shan | Liang, Xu‐Fang | Luo, Xiaonian | Li, Aixuan | Zhou, Yi
Failing to initiate first feeding during the transition from endogenous nutrition to exogenous feeding will lead to starvation of fish larvae. However, little is known about the mechanism of first feeding selection of fish. Golden mandarin fish larvae (3 d after hatch, 2.05 ± 0.03 mg) were fed with four different foods for 7 d, including the following: M – Megalobrama amblycephala (prey fish larvae as natural food); S – surimi of M. amblycephala; A – Artemia (zooplankton); and MA –mixed M. amblycephala with Artemia (mixed food). Larvae fed with the mixed food achieved an appropriate balance between high survival and good growth through elevating the expression of growth genes (GH, IGF‐I, and IGF‐II) and fatty acid synthesis genes (FAD and ELO). Growth performance of fish fed with MA reared at different salinities (0, 5, and 10 ppt) was examined. The salinity of 5 ppt produced the best growth performance of the three salinity levels tested. Fish larvae adapted to high‐ or low‐salinity environments through increasing the expression of lipolysis genes (HSL, LPL, and HL). Therefore, both food type and salinity affect the growth, survival, and lipometabolism of golden mandarin fish larvae during initial feeding stage, and mixed food and 5 ppt salinity improved its survival and growth.
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