1st Edition

Antimicrobials for Sustainable Food Storage

    392 Pages 8 Color & 51 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Finding natural substances is worthwhile in food preservation. The principal motivation behind this edited volume Antimicrobials for Sustainable Food Storage is to collect and present widespread knowledge in the domain of sustainable food ingredients with antimicrobial properties. The book consists of two sections. The first section of this volume is about food ingredients as antimicrobials, and the second section discusses the recent advances in the applications of food ingredients.

    Interplay of various environmental factors favor the growth of different microorganisms during the food preservation process. growth of undesirable microorganisms negatively influences the taste, smell, color, and texture of food. Therefore, sustainable food preservation is a challenging issue. Though several chemicals have emerged, inevitable health effects are commonly encountered by food preserve chemicals.

    Microbial products (Nisin, enterocin, pentosin, sakacin, and pediocin) have immense importance in prolonging the shelf life of food substances by controlling food spoilage and pathogenic microbes.  Yeasts and Cyanobacteria are also potential candidates in the supply of food ingredients with significant antimicrobial properties. However, limited awareness of antimicrobials as food ingredients and the unavailability of a single source of the latest insights on such food ingredients in one place led to the motivation to produce this work.

    Key Features:

    ·       Provides insights on natural antimicrobials in food preservation. 

    ·       Underlines the importance of sustainable food packaging.

    ·       Offers knowledge on emerging trends in antimicrobial-based food storage.

    Diverse applications are covered in different chapters. This book covers various antimicrobials as food preservatives, such as metabolites, natural products, essential oils nanomaterials, L-arginine, polyphenols, phaeophyceae, horchata. There are also chapters that focus on the applicability and prospective studies of essential oils, edible biofilms, biodegradable antimicrobials, and nanostructured lipid carriers in the food sector and the method for encapsulation of antimicrobials.

    Section 1: FOOD INGREDIENTS AS ANTIMICROBIALS

    Chapter 1. Antimicrobial activity of natural metabolites

    Grijalva-Vallejos N., Barba P., Chiliquinga A., Echeverría C., Ortega S., Sandoval S., Sulca T., Zárate S.

    Chapter 2. Natural Antimicrobials, Their Sources and Food Safety

    Kalyani Chepuri, Ashwitha Kodaparthi, Akella Sree Vidya Keertana, Katkojwal Sandhya, Lavudi Saida

    Chapter 3. Natural Antimicrobials in Food Packaging and Preservation

    Ashwitha Kodaparthi, B. Susmitha, Saloni Prasad, Nanditha Chinni, Suresh Babu Bastipati

    Chapter 4. Antimicrobial activity of essential oils: Food aplication and determination methods

    Virginia Monserrate López-Zambrano, José Daniel Zambrano-Véliz, Alex Alberto Dueñas-Rivadeneira, Ulbio Eduardo Alcívar-Cedeño, Gabriel Alfonso Burgos-Briones, Diego German Segovia- Cedeño and Henry David Loor-Vélez.

    Chapter 5. Antimicrobial Agents in Food Preservation

    Babafemi Raphael Babaniyi, Olusola David Ogundele, Ebunoluwa Elizabeth Babaniyi

    Chapter 6. Antimicrobial Packaging to Preserve Food Quality and Food Self Life

    Srinivasan Kameswaran and Bellamkonda Ramesh

    Chapter 7. Antimicrobial nanomaterials in the food industry

    Katherine Georgina Menon, Kondakindi Venkateshwar Reddy, Pabbati Ranjit, Dheeraj William Watkins

    Chapter 8. Production of L-arginine by fermentation: its applications as food ingredients and antimicrobials

    Anjaneyulu Musini, Eligeti Pravalika, Lakshmi Narasu Mangamoori and Archana Giri

    Chapter 9. Role of Antibacterial Polyphenols (PPS) in Food Preservative Applications and correlated to crystals structures as reference tool

     SenthilKannan K., Manikandan R., Vimalan, M., Krishnaveni, R.

    Chatper 10. Bioprospective Value of Phaeophyceae : Antimicrobial Potential, Bioactive Components and its Health Promoting Perspectives

    Mukul M. Barwant, Vanita C.  Karande, Shalagha AB Sharma, Gholamreza Abdi, Sagar S. Bawake, Pratiksha K Fulari

    Chapter 11. Antimicrobial activity and potential of the ingredients of horchata – a traditional Southern Ecuadorian Highlands herbal drink

    Rodrigo Duarte-Casar, Marlene Rojas-Le-Fort, Natalia Bailon-Moscoso, Juan Carlos Romero-Benavides.

    Section 2: APPLICATIONS OF FOOD INGREDIENTS – RECENT ADVANCES

    Chapter 12. Antimicrobial potentiality of Endophytes in agriculture, food-nutrition, and packaging

    Meena Barupal, Jaskiran Kaur, Sumitra K. Choudhary, Rekha Chauhan, Manoj Kumar, Sunita Arora

    Chapter 13. Microencapsulation of essential oils for food preservation: Methods, Mechanisms and Applications

    Diego Germán Segovia Cedeño, Henry David Loor Vélez, Alex Alberto Dueñas-Rivadeneira, Ulbio Eduardo Alcívar-Cedeño, Virginia Monserrate López-Zambrano, José Daniel Zambrano-Veliz

    Chapter 14. Antimicrobial edible biofilms for food packaging – Nano-based technologies

    Varimadugu Aruna, Navya Sree Duggi Reddy, Balaji Doolam, Jyothika Meenakshi Kambhampati, Chunduru Sai Hari Hara Sudheshna

    Chapter 15. Spray drying as a tool for the microencapsulation of essential oils as natural food additives

    Jaime O. Rojas-Molina, Mario A. García, Jorge A. Pino

    Chapter 16. Emerging Trends in Antimicrobial Use for Sustainable Food Preservation

    Sandip Mondal, Manish Gautam, Rakesh Das

    Chapter 17. Biodegradable Antimicrobials in Food Packaging

    Ashwitha Kodaparthi, Bansuwada Sowmya, Bussa Archana, KVBS Prajna, Kalyani Chepuri

    Chapter 18. Nanostructured Lipid Carriers (NLCs) for the Aqueous-Based Food Preservation

    P. Suresh Kumar, Chepuri Kalyani, Katkojwal Sandhya, Mangala Gunapreethi, C D S L N Tulasi

    Chapter 19. Scientific Research on Antimicrobials: Bibliometric Assessment of Contributions in WOS (2000-2021)

    Analuisa Aroca Iván Alberto

    Biography

    Naga Raju Maddela received his M.Sc. (1996–1998) and Ph.D. (2012) in Microbiology from Sri Krishnadevaraya University, Anantapuramu, India. During his doctoral program in the area of Environmental Microbiology, he investigated the effects of industrial effluents/insecticides on soil microorganisms and their biological activities and he is working as Faculty in Microbiology since 1998, teaching undergraduate and postgraduate students. He worked on Prometeo Investigator (fellowship received from SENESCYT) at Universidad Estatal Amazónica, Ecuador during 2013-15, received "Postdoctoral Fellowship" (2016–2018) from Sun Yat-sen University, China. He also received external funding from "China Postdoctoral Science Foundation" in 2017, internal funding from "Universidad Técnica de Manabí" in 2020. He participated in national / international conferences, and presented research data in China, Cuba, Ecuador, India and Singapore. Currently, he is working as a Full Professor at the Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud, Universidad Técnica de Manabí, Portoviejo, Ecuador. He has been actively publishing scientific articles, books (authored and edited) and chapters since 2007. As of now, he published 80 articles, 15 books and 50 book chapters.

    Gusdanis Alberto Campos García received his Bachelor's degree in Chemistry (2005) and Ph.D in Chemistry (2012) from Universidad del Zulia, Venezuela. He served as a Full-time Associate Professor of the Academic Unit of Analytical Chemistry, Faculty of Experimental Sciences, Universidad del Zulia, Venezuela (2014-2016). Also, he worked as Research and Development Coordinator at Simsa oil company in Venezuela (2013-2016). Since 2016, he is working as a Principal professor of Laboratory Instrumentation and Toxicology of the Clinical Laboratory course, Faculty of Health Sciences (FHS), Universidad Técnica de Manabí (UTM), Portoviejo, Ecuador. At UTM, he is also serving as a Vice-Dean of Research and Postgraduate of the faculty of Health Sciences from 2017 to present. He is a Member of the Clinical Laboratory Sciences research group at UTM and supervising students of master's program in biomedicine. He is an alternate member of the Honorable University Council of UTM for the period 2023-2025.

    Jaskiran Kaur is presently working as an Assistant Professor in the department of Biotechnology, DAV University, Sarmastpur, Jalandhar, Punjab- 144012, India. She has more than three years of teaching and research experience. She has received her MSc in Biotechnology from Punjab University, Chandigarh in 2010; and MPhil and PhD in Environmental Science and Technology from Central University of Punjab, Bathinda, India in 2012 and 2019, respectively. Her area of research interest is wastewater management and treatment, membrane bioreactor, membrane fouling mitigation, quorum quenching, biofuels and bioremediation. She has published more than 25 research papers in peer-reviewed national and international research journals, conference proceedings and chapters in books.  She is serving as a Brand ambassador in The Bentham Science Publisher. In addition, she organized several workshops and faculty development programs till date. She has also participated in various training programs, faculty development programs, seminars and presented her work in more than 10 National, International conferences and seminars as well.