Binding of water, oil, and bile acids to dietary fibers of the cellan type

Citation
G. Dongowski et R. Ehwald, Binding of water, oil, and bile acids to dietary fibers of the cellan type, BIOTECH PR, 15(2), 1999, pp. 250-258
Citations number
46
Categorie Soggetti
Biotecnology & Applied Microbiology",Microbiology
Journal title
BIOTECHNOLOGY PROGRESS
ISSN journal
87567938 → ACNP
Volume
15
Issue
2
Year of publication
1999
Pages
250 - 258
Database
ISI
SICI code
8756-7938(199903/04)15:2<250:BOWOAB>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Dietary fibers (DF) of the "cellan" type (consisting mainly or exclusively of undestroyed cells) were prepared as ethanol-dried materials from apple, cabbage, sugar-beet, soybean hulls, wheat bran, and suspension cultures of Chenopodium album L. and investigated with respect to their interactions wi th water, water-oil dispersions, bile acids, and oil. Water binding and ret ention capacities were found to be especially high in cellans obtained from thin-walled raw material. Water damp sorption by dry cellans, when analyze d according to the GAB and BET equations, shows a considerable fraction of monolayer water. At a water activity of 0.98, the cell and capillary spaces outside the walls remained in the air-filled state but the cell wall pores are filled with water. When the water content of a concentrated aqueous ce llan suspension was equal to or below the water binding capacity, its rheol ogical behavior was found to be of pseudoplastic nature. At a given dry wei ght concentration, yield stress and viscosity of such concentrated suspensi ons were highest for cellans with the highest water binding capacity. Dry c ellan particles absorbed fatty oils without swelling but swell in a deterge nt-stabilized oil/water emulsion with a similar liquid absorption capacity as in water. In contrast to the dry or alkane-saturated cell wall, the hydr ated wall is not permeable to oils in the absence of a detergent. Oil dropl ets may be entrapped within the cells, yielding a stable dispersion of oil in water. As DF of the cellan type absorb bile acids, preferentially glycoc onjugates, from diluted solutions, they may have a potential to decrease th e serum cholesterol level.