Supercritical antisolvent processing of propolis extract: solubility and release behaviour of bioactive compounds in different food simulants

Gulay Ozkan, Ilayda Sanli, Stefania Mottola, Iolanda De Marco, Esra Capanoglu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Propolis is rich in phenolic compounds, but its low stability during gastrointestinal digestion necessitates encapsulation. This study aimed to optimize the process parameters for supercritical antisolvent precipitation (SAS) through characterization methods and by evaluating the bioaccessibility and bioavailability of phenolics in microparticles via in vitro gastrointestinal digestion/Caco-2 cell culture model using lipophilic, hydrophilic, and acidic food simulants. The highest encapsulation efficiency (75 %) was achieved with Eudragit/propolis (10:1) at 40 °C and 150 bar. Before the digestion of microparticles, total phenolic content, total flavonoid content, and antioxidant activity (CUPRAC and DPPH) results were found to be 456.13 mg GAE/100 g, 8199.02 mg QE/100 g, 2408.94 mg TE/100 g and 1185.89 mg TE/100 g powders, respectively. In general, both the bioaccessibility and bioavailability were highest in lipophilic simulants, followed by hydrophilic and acidic ones. These findings highlight that encapsulated propolis is more effectively transported in the presence of lipophilic foods.

Original languageEnglish
Article number144742
JournalFood Chemistry
Volume489
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 15 Oct 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025

Keywords

  • Antioxidant activity
  • Bee product
  • Bioavailability
  • Entrapment
  • Gastrointestinal digestion
  • MTT assay
  • Transepithelial transportation

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