Physiological and Technological Properties of Probiotic Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus GG Encapsulated with Alginate-Chitosan Mixture and Its Incorporation in Whole Milk

Probiotics Antimicrob Proteins. 2024 Aug 20. doi: 10.1007/s12602-024-10345-w. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

This study developed and evaluated chitosan-sodium alginate capsules containing the probiotic Lacticaseibacillus rhamnosus GG using extrusion and emulsification techniques. The encapsulated L. rhamnosus GG cells were also evaluated for technological and probiotic-related physiological functionalities, as well as when incorporated in UHT and powdered milk. Extrusion (86.01 ± 1.26%) and emulsification (74.43 ± 1.41%) encapsulation techniques showed high encapsulation efficiency and high survival rates of L. rhamnosus GG during 28 days of refrigeration and room temperature storage, especially emulsification capsules (> 81%). The encapsulated L. rhamnosus GG cells showed high survival rates during exposure to simulated gastrointestinal conditions (72.65 ± 1.09-114.15 ± 0.44%). L. rhamnosus GG encapsulated by extrusion and emulsification performed satisfactorily in probiotic-related physiological (pH and bile salts tolerance) and technological properties (positive proteolytic activity, diacetyl and exopolysaccharides production, high NaCl tolerance (> 91%), besides having high heat tolerance (> 76%)). L. rhamnosus GG in extrusion and emulsification capsules had high survival rates (> 89%) and did not significantly affect physicochemical parameters in Ultra-High Temperature (UHT) and powdered milk during storage. The results demonstrate that L. rhamnosus GG can be successfully encapsulated with alginate-chitosan as a protective material through extrusion and emulsification techniques. UHT and powdered milk could serve as appropriate delivery systems to increase the intake of this encapsulated probiotic by consumers.

Keywords: Delivery; Digestion; Encapsulation; Powdered milk; Storage; Survival; UHT milk.