Where Is the Nano in Our Foods? - American Chemical Society

Sep 22, 2014 - José Miguel Aguilera*. Department of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile...
0 downloads 0 Views 3MB Size
Subscriber access provided by Universitätsbibliothek Bern

Perspective

Where is the nano in our foods? Jose Miguel Aguilera J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/jf5016939 • Publication Date (Web): 22 Sep 2014 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on September 29, 2014

Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.

Page 1 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14

Perspective

15

to be the case in foods where potential adverse effects are resented by consumers.

16

However, unknown to many people some of the most desirable properties of our daily

17

foods reside in a microstructure where the nanolevel plays an important role in the

18

form of macromolecular arrangements, aggregates, colloidal networks, interfaces and

19

nanoparticles. This article unveils where the “nano” in our kitchens is.

20 21 22 23

Where is the nano in our foods? José Miguel Aguilera* Department of Chemical and Bioprocess Engineering Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile (Phone: 562 2354-4256. Email: [email protected])

Although nanotechnology has opened opportunities in many fields this does not appear

Introduction Imagine nanoemulsions containing antimicrobials that impede the growth of

24

microorganisms causing food spoilage and food infections. Or liposomes that protect

25

nutrients and bioactive compounds so they are more efficiently delivered for absorption

26

in our intestine. Think about vegetable protein nanofibers that when bound together

27

resemble a chunk of meat at a fraction of the energy input to produce them. These are

28

only some examples of how novel nanostructures may greatly assist in reducing food

29

waste, improving our health and providing new sources of tasty foods.

30 31

While nanomaterials have opened opportunities in many fields this does not appear to

32

be the case in foods where potential adverse effects of added nanostructures are

33

hindering their acceptance by consumers and regulatory agencies alike.1 Nevertheless, * Foreign member, U.S. National Academy of Engineering 1

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 2 of 15

34

nanostructures smaller than 300 nm (e.g., macromolecules, molecular assemblies,

35

nanostructures, tiny particles and interfaces) are ubiquitously present as part of our daily

36

foods. We do not eat a homogeneous “soup” of nutrients but palatable structures in

37

which molecules are either assembled in a hierarchical progression (e.g., meat), or

38

become kinetically trapped during processing as fine networks (e.g., a gelatin dessert),

39

microdomains (e.g., aromas in instant coffee) or composites (e.g., bread crumb).2 So

40

far, none of these food nanostructures have proven to be harmful as they are easily

41

digested or eliminated by our body.

42 43 44 45

Food nanotechnology in Nature Milk in our refrigerators is perhaps the best example of a food “nano-fabricated” by

46

Nature. Milk proteins (i.e., casein and the globular proteins β-lactoglobulin and α-

47

lactalbumin) are synthesized in the cells of the cow’s udder and transported out into the

48

plasma or aqueous phase. Casein is secreted as a micelle (300-400 nm in size)

49

assembled from different casein subunits held together by colloidal calcium phosphate

50

(Figure 1). Triacylglycerides are gathered together as small droplets which fuse as the

51

growing lipid droplet (100 nm to 10 µm) moves toward the apical plasma membrane.

52

Lipid droplets are released from inside the cell surrounded by the cellular membrane

53

and become the fat globules in milk.3 In turn, the milk fat globule membrane is a

54

complex lipid bilayer, four to 25 nm thick, containing several types of bioactive

55

molecules within its structure (Figure 1).4 It is remarkable that the wide assortment of

56

dairy products is based principally on the interactions between only two types of

57

building blocks: milk proteins and the fat globules.

58 59 60

Several nutrients that we derive from plants are neatly packed in organelles inside cells.

61

Obliteration of these arrangements has culinary implications as experimented when 2

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 3 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

62

crushing the garlic cloves and triggering the enzyme-substrate reaction responsible for

63

the flavor and odor of fresh garlic. The attractive green color of some vegetables is

64

preserved as long as chlorophylls - the porphyrin rings precisely doped with a

65

magnesium atom at their center - remain in cylindrical membrane stacks around 300-

66

600 nm in diameter (stroma) inside the chloroplasts. The cell wall in dry legumes, a

67

source of dietary fiber, is actually a 300 to 1,000 nm thick composite material made up

68

of cellulose microfibrils, hemicelluloses, pectins, lignin and proteins. Cooking dissolves

69

the portion of the walls cementing the cells together giving grains a soft texture during

70

mastication.

71 72

Other times Nature builds hierarchical structures from the macromolecular to the tissue

73

level. The gastronomic condition of a steak depends on the degree of denaturation of

74

two extended proteins (myosin and actin, around 130 Å and 70 Å in diameter,

75

respectively) residing inside myofibrils, the structural units of meat fibers, as well as on

76

the breakdown of the sheath made of collagen fibers (ca. 200 nm in diameter) holding

77

the fibers together. A high number of remaining crosslinks per unit volume of collagen

78

correlates well with the toughness of cooked meat.5

79 80 81 82

The build-up of food structures Major macromolecular components of foods – proteins and polysaccharides – have

83

nanodimensions and during processing undergo transformations and interactions that

84

span several length scales and are crucial in shaping the microstructure of many foods

85

(Figure 1).6 Globular proteins in milk unfold when heated and may self-assemble into

86

fibrils and even form aggregates that in the case of β-lactoglobulin (ca. 3.6 nm in the

87

native state) range in size from 40 to 100 nm depending on the pH (Figure 2a).7

88

Denatured globular proteins in milk form co-aggregates with casein resulting in stiff 3

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 4 of 15

89

gels (e.g., yoghurt). Incidentally, α-lactalbumin has the ability to form nanotubules, but

90

their presence in dairy products has not been reported.8 Wheat flour has two unique

91

proteins: the macropolymer glutenin (approximate length of 50 nm and diameter of 1.8

92

nm) and the monomeric units of gliadin. During kneading the long glutenin chains

93

associate via physical entanglements into a large network and further interact with

94

space-filling gliadins to form the thin films that give the unique viscoelastic properties

95

and gas-holding capacity to wheat dough.9 Polysaccharide gels trap abundant water

96

inside a polymer or colloidal network turning liquid foods into a semi-solid material.

97

Electron micrographs show that some polysaccharide gels, as those of κ-carrageenan

98

that may be present in flans and puddings, have fine and long filaments a few

99

nanometers in diameter (Figure 2b).10 Conversely, casein gels the basic structures in

100

cheeses and yoghurt, have thick strands formed by casein micelles attached as a string-

101

of-beads (Figure 2c).

102 103

All starches in cereals (and roots as well) are present in the form densely packed

104

granules 5 to 50 µm in size. Inside the granule, the branched polysaccharide

105

amylopectin is ordered as neat semi-crystalline layers 10 nm in thickness holding

106

amylose molecules in inner spaces (Figure 1). Cooking in the presence of abundant

107

water hydrates and swells the starch granules obliterating their native structure and

108

releasing both polymers. Thus, a cake mix may now set in the oven into a firm matrix

109

formed by gluten proteins interspersed with swollen starch granules, fat and sugar that

110

harbors many gas cells. However, most cereal foods are metastable amorphous

111

materials and the released starch biopolymers may recrystallize on cooling into domains

112

10-20 nm in size, as those found in stale bakery products or cooled

113

potatoes.11Conversely, expanded snacks are produced by heating and shearing a low-

4

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 5 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

114

moisture starchy flour inside an extruder-cooker, physically fragmenting the granules to

115

sub-micron sizes and breaking down amylose and amylopectin into dextrins. Upon

116

exiting the extruder's die the melt is blown up by the released steam resulting in a

117

spongy and soft material characteristic of extruded snacks.12

118 119

Lipids in oilseeds are stored in discrete subcellular organelles called lipid bodies, less

120

than 1 µm in size, surrounded by proteins which act as natural emulsifiers. Most lipids

121

that we consume are triacylglycerol molecules (triglycerides) that may crystallize from

122

the molten state as nanoplatelets 30-40 nm thick and extending for around 370 nm

123

(Figure 2d).13 In turn, stacks of nanoplatelets form crystallites that cluster together into

124

aggregates eventually developing a fat network that occludes portions of liquid fat

125

resulting in a plastic structure typical of butter and margarine (Figure 1).

126

Monoglycerides and phospholipids are used as emulsifiers due to their amphiphilic

127

nature. In an aqueous phase they may self-associate into a multitude of nanosized

128

structures, for example, micelles and vesicles, which may be found in emulsions such as

129

salad dressings (Figure 1).14

130 131

Two-phase systems in foods such as emulsions and liquid foams owe their existence to

132

interfacial liquid films stabilized by amphiphilic lipids and/or proteins. Adsorption at

133

O/W interfaces in protein-stabilized food emulsions occurs at dimensions of 10 nm.15

134

The stability of beer foam (head) depends on the interaction of proteins and

135

polypeptides extracted from malt and iso-α-acids from hops to form an elastic film

136

around 10 nm thick at the liquid/air interface. Although the channels separating adjacent

137

bubbles (lamellae) may have initially an average thickness of around 1 µm, liquid

138

continuously drains from them until thinning leads to the eventual collapse of the

139

foam.16 5

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 6 of 15

140 141

Solid particles and droplets produced by mechanical size reduction are present in

142

several foods and ingredients. From a sensorial viewpoint soft foods containing solid

143

particles larger than 40 µm are described as having a “sandy texture”, thus the need for

144

fine milling. Grinding and homogenization involve a kinetics of size reduction that

145

yields a particle or droplet size distribution usually characterized by a mean value that in

146

O/W emulsions (e.g., dressings and mayonnaise) produced by high pressure

147

homogenization may be around 300 nm.17 Most particles in a commercial chocolate

148

enrobing mass, for instance, are between 8 and 40 µm, but ca. 0.5% have sizes smaller

149

than 1 µm.18 This may seem a low volume fraction but it represents a large number of

150

particles due to their tiny size. The shelves in our kitchens store food powders that tend

151

to agglomerate, so amorphous silica particles are a permitted additive to avoid caking.

152

Some commercial samples of food-grade SiO2 contain aggregates in the range of 50-

153

200 nm with a mode of 70-120 nm.19 Titanium dioxide nanoparticles, used to enhance

154

the whiteness of a wide variety of foods (e.g., candy and chewing gum), are less than

155

300 nm in at least one dimension and 30% of them smaller than 100 nm.20 They are

156

eliminated in the urine and feces. However, some inorganic nanoparticles have been

157

demonstrated to have biological activity at the cellular and subcellular levels and

158

interfere with the are justified when they are neither soluble in water or oil nor degraded

159

in the gastrointestinal tract or readily excreted.

160 161

Several food components crystallize during processing or storage. The size of crystals

162

increases continuously with time after nucleation, while the reverse occurs as they

163

become dissolved in saliva or in the gastrointestinal fluids. Heat and mass transfer

164

limitations during crystallization result in a distribution of sizes whose tail representing

6

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 7 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

165

small crystals may well intrude into the nanorange. A domestic ice cream machine

166

produces ice crystals 30-40 µm in size that may be perceived as sandiness in the tongue.

167

However, pouring liquid nitrogen (-196 ºC) directly into the cream mix under vigorous

168

agitation causes the formation of tiny ice crystals smaller than 1 µm giving ice cream a

169

smooth texture that fascinates modern chefs.21On the contrary, it has been known for

170

more than a century that the grittiness we appreciate in some cheeses corresponds to

171

crystals of different amino acids that develop during ageing (e.g., Roquefort cheese and

172

tyrosine crystals).22 Crystals (mainly of calcium oxalate) have also been found in many

173

edible plants but they are probably dissolved during cooking or digestion.23

174 175

Nano-processing of foods does not end in the kitchen but continues inside our bodies.

176

Different to most other materials of our daily life the “utility” of food structures lies in

177

the rate and extent in which they are broken down and disintegrated. It is quite likely

178

that as nutrients become liberated from the food matrix during digestion they will

179

participate in interactions among them and with other molecules, thus forming new

180

nanosized

181

nanostructures26, a phenomenon that we are just starting to understand.

particles24,

complex

aggregates25

and

self-assembled

colloidal

182 183

Nanoparticles may unintentionally find their way into our foods, for example, after

184

being released from food packaging, coatings of processing equipment or from products

185

of plant or animal origin. Some nanoparticles, particularly those of inorganic sources,

186

have been shown to transverse the gastro-intestinal mucosa, get into some organs and

187

reach the cellular level.27 In vivo studies on the cytotoxicity or genotoxicity of these

188

nanomaterials, generally conducted in mice and rats, are scarce and most of them fail at

189

adequately characterizing the materials utilized, thus, no generalizations could be made

7

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 8 of 15

190

of their biological activity.28 Despite efforts from food regulatory agencies and

191

institutions (e.g,, FAO/WHO) gaps continue to exist as to the methodologies to be used

192

in evaluating the safety of these nanomaterials and the relevance of the data generated.29

193 194 195 196

Conclusions There are many identifiable nanostructures in the foods we eat. These edible

197

nanostructures are assembled by nature, created during processing or cooking,

198

intentionally added as ingredients, and perhaps incorporated inadvertently from the

199

surroundings (e.g., nanoparticles in the air beaten into food foams!). So far they have

200

proven to be either soluble, degradable in the gut or eliminated from our bodies, and

201

nontoxic, conditions expected to be satisfied also by fabricated nanostructures added to

202

foods. Increasing knowledge of the nanostructures present in our foods may provide a

203

basis for the rational design of structures at the nanoscale to impart desired taste/texture

204

attributes, thus replacing the trial-and-error approaches presently used. Conceivably,

205

food scientists may be inspired by how these “natural” nanostructures come into being

206

to develop novel and functional products “bottom-up”.

207

provided by the nanosciences is not only assisting in our understanding of the nanoscale

208

phenomena of the materials we eat and digest but also to assess the potential

209

implications of new food nanotechnologies.30

210 211 212 213

Meanwhile, the toolbox

References (1) Institute of Medicine. Safety and efficacy of nanomaterials in food products. In

214

Nanotechnology in Food Products. National Academy Press, Washington, DC,

215

2009, pp.55-83.

8

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 9 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

216

(2) Aguilera, J.M. Food materials and structures. In Edible Structures: the basic

217

science of what we eat. CRC Press/Taylor and Francis, Boca Raton, FL, 2012,

218

pp. 53-105.

219 220 221 222 223 224

(3) Heid, H.W.; Keenan, T.W. Intracellular origin and secretion of fat globules. Eur. J. Cell Biol. 2005, 84, 245–258. (4) Michalski, M.-C.; Januel, C. Does homogenization affect the human health properties of cow's milk? Trends Food Sci. Tech. 2006, 17, 423-437. (5) Lepetit, J. Collagen contribution to meat toughness: theoretical aspects. Meat Sci. 2008, 80, 960–967.

225

(6) Donald, A. Food for thought. Nature Mater 2004, 3, 579 – 581.

226

(7) Zuñiga, R.N.; Tolkach, A.; Kulozik, U.; Aguilera, J.M. Kinetics of formation

227

and physicochemical characterization of thermally-induced β-lactoglobulin

228

aggregates. J. Food Sci. 2010, 75, E261-E268.

229 230

(8) Graveland-Bikker, J.F.; de Kruif, C.G. Unique milk protein based nanotubes: food and nanotechnology meet. Trends Food Sci. Tech. 2006, 17, 196–203.

231

(9) Veraverbeke, W.S.; Delcour, J.A, Wheat protein composition and properties of

232

wheat glutenin in relation to breadmaking functionality. Crit. Rev. Food Sci.

233

2002, 42, 179-208.

234

(10) Walther, B.; Lorén, N.; Nydén, M.; Hermansson, A.-M. Influence of kappa-

235

carrageenan gel structures on diffusion of probe molecules determined by

236

transmission electron microscopy and NMR diffusometry. Langmuir 2006, 22,

237

8221-8228.

238

(11) Chung, H.-J.; Liu, Q. Impact of molecular structure of amylase and

239

amylopectin on amylase association during cooling. Carbohyd. Polym. 2009, 77,

240

807-815.

9

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 10 of 15

241

(12) Barron, C.; Bouchet, B.; Della Valle, G.; Gallant, D.J.; Planchot, V.

242

Microscopical study of the destructuring of waxy maize and smooth pea starches

243

by shear and heat at low hydration. J. Cereal Sci. 2001, 33, 289-300.

244 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 253 254 255

(13) Acevedo, N.C.; Marangoni, A.G. Characterization of the manoscale in triacylglycerol crystal networks. Cryst. Growth Des. 2010, 10, 3327–3333. (14) Mezzenga, R.; Schurtenberger, P.; Burbidge, A.; Michel, M. Understanding foods as soft materials. Nature Mater. 2005, 4, 729-740. (15) Dagleish, D.G. Food emulsions – their structures and structure-forming properties. Food Hydrocoll. 2006, 20, 415-422. (16) Mileva, E.; Tchoukov, P.; Exerowa, E. Amphiphilic nanostructures in thin liquid films. Adv. Colloid Interfac. Sci. 2005, 114–115, 47– 52. (17) Schubert, H., Ax, K. & Behrend, O. Product engineering of dispersed systems. Trends Food Sci. Tech. 2003, 14, 9-16. (18) Servais, C.; Jones, R.; Roberts, I. The influence of particle size distribution on the processing of foods. J. Food Eng. 2002, 51, 201-208.

256

(19) Contardo, C.; Ravani, L.; Passarella, M. Size characterization by sedimentation

257

field flow fractionation of silica particles used as food additives. Anal. Chim.

258

Acta 2013, 788, 183-192.

259

(20) Weir, A.; Westerhoff, P.; Fabricius, L.; Hristovski, K.; von Goetz, N. Titanium

260

dioxide nanoparticles in food and personal care products. Environ. Sci. Technol.

261

2012, 46, 2242-2250.

262 263 264 265

(21) http://blog.khymos.org/2012/09/09/gastrophysics-symposium-in-copenhagen/ (accessed Dec 9, 2013). (22) Dox, A.W. The occurrence of tyrosine crystals in Roquefort cheese. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1911, 33, 423-425.

10

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 11 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

266 267

(23) Nakata, P.A. Advances in our understanding of calcium oxalate crystal formation and function in plants. Plant Sci. 2003, 164, 901-909.

268

(24) Monro, J. A.; Mishra, S.; Hardacre, A. Glycemic impact regulation based on

269

progressive geometric changes in starch-based food particles during digestion.

270

Food Digestion 2011, 2, 1–12.

271 272

(25) Mackie, A.; Macierzanka, A. Colloidal aspects of protein digestion. Curr. Opin. Colloid Interface Sci. 2010, 15, 102–108.

273

(26) Porter, J. H.; Trevaskis, N. L.; Charman, W.N. Lipids and lipid-based

274

formulations: optimizing the oral delivery of lipophylic drugs. Nat. Rev. Drug

275

Discov. 2007, 6, 231-248.

276

(27) Casals, E; Vázquez-Campos, S; Bastús, N.G; Puntes, V. Distribution and

277

potential

toxicity

of

engineered

inorganic

nanoparticles

278

nanostructures in biological systems. TrAC 2008, 27, 672-683.

and

carbon

279

(28) Magnuson, B.A,; Jonaitis, T.S.; Card, J.W. A brief review of the occurrence,

280

use, and safety of food-related nanomaterials. J. Food Sci. 2011, 76, R126-33.

281

(29) Takeuchi, M.; Kojima, M; Luetzow, M. State of the art on the initiatives and

282

activities relevant to risk assessment and risk management of nanotechnologies

283

in the food and agriculture sectors. DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2014.03.022.

284 285

(30) Maynard, A.; Bowman, D.; Hodge, G. The problem of regulating sophisticated materials. Nature Mater. 2011, 10, 554 – 557.

Figures

11

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 12 of 15

Figure 1

12

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 13 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Figure 2

13

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

Page 14 of 15

Figure legends Figure 1.

Proteins, starch and lipids undergo major transformations at several length

scales during processing and cooking. Casein micelles and fat globules in milk enter the kitchen already as micron or submicron structures to later give rise to a myriad of dairy products. Starch granules must be cooked so that amylose and amylopectin are released from their natural semicrystalline arrangement of nanosize dimensions. Lipid molecules may form nanostructures (monoglycerides) or become hierarchically assembled into fat crystal networks (triacylglycerols). [Approximate scales]. Figure 2. Images of some food structures at the nanoscale. a) Protein aggregates (arrows) produced by heating native β-lactoglobulin at 80ºC and pH 6.0.7 These type of aggregates may also be formed when heating milk; b) TEM image of a 1% κcarrageenan gel10; c) Yoghurt-type gel showing two milk fat globules (arrows) and casein micelles arranged as a string-of-beads.2 Note anchoring of the strands to the globules' surface; and, d) Cross-section of nanoplatelets (circle) in a fat crystal network.13 All images were acquired by transmission electron microscopy.

14

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 15 of 15

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

For Table of Contents Only

286

15

ACS Paragon Plus Environment