Mucilage polysaccharide as a plant secretion: Potential trends in food and biomedical applications

Gulden Goksen, Didem Demir, Kuldeep Dhama, Manoj Kumar, Ping Shao, Fengwei Xie, Noemí Echegaray, Jose Manuel Lorenzo

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

43 Citations (SciVal)

Abstract

Current trends are shifting away from using synthetic compounds in favor of discovering new natural component sources that will allow them to create goods that are healthful, environmentally friendly, sustainable, and profitable. The food industry, in light of these trends, has opted to look for safe natural ingredients that will allow the production of low-fat, artificial-additive-free, gluten-free, prebiotic, and fortified foods. Similarly, the pharmaceutical and medical industries have attempted to apply natural ingredients to address the challenges related to biomaterials more efficiently than synthetic ingredients. Against this background, plant mucilage has proven to be a polysaccharide with excellent health features and technological properties, useful for both food and biomedical applications. Many studies have shown that its inclusion in different food matrices improves the quality of the products obtained under appropriate reformulations. At the same time, plant mucilage has been indicated to be a very interesting matrix in biomedical field especially tissue engineering applications since it has been emerged to favor tissue regeneration with its highly biocompatible structure. This concise review discusses the most recent advances of the applications of plant mucilage in different foods as well as its recent use in biomedical field. In this context, firstly, a general definition of mucilage was made and information about plant-based mucilage, which is frequently used, about the plant parts they are found in, their content and how they are obtained are presented. Then, the use of mucilage in the food industry including bakery products, meat emulsions, fermented dairy products, ice cream, and other foods is presented with case studies. Afterwards, the use of plant mucilage in the biomedical field, which has attracted attention in recent years, especially in applications with tissue engineering approach such as scaffolds for tissue regeneration, wound dressings, drug delivery systems and pharmaceutical industry was evaluated.

Original languageEnglish
Article number123146
JournalInternational Journal of Biological Macromolecules
Volume230
Early online date4 Jan 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2023

Funding

Universidade de Vigo/CISUG. Noemí Echegaray acknowledges to Axencia Galega de Innovación (GAIN) for granting with a postdoctoral scholarship (grant number IN606B-2022/006). Jose M. Lorenzo belongs to the competitive reference research group FunMeat (Axencia Galega de Innovación, GAININ607A2019/01). Jose M. Lorenzo is member of the HealthyMeat network, funded by CYTED (Ref.119RT0568). Noemí Echegaray acknowledges to Axencia Galega de Innovación (GAIN) for granting with a postdoctoral scholarship (grant number IN606B-2022/006). Jose M. Lorenzo belongs to the competitive reference research group FunMeat (Axencia Galega de Innovación, GAININ607A2019/01). Jose M. Lorenzo is member of the HealthyMeat network, funded by CYTED (Ref.119RT0568).

FundersFunder number
CISUG
Vigo University
CYTED Ciencia y Tecnología para el Desarrollo.119RT0568
Axencia Galega de InnovaciónIN606B-2022/006

    Keywords

    • Drug delivery
    • Healthy food
    • Plant mucilage
    • Scaffold
    • Wound dressing

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Structural Biology
    • Biochemistry
    • Molecular Biology

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