Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application

The objective of this study is to verify potential of various types of microorganisms during spray drying and non-refrigerated storage that can be enhanced substantially by selecting suitable protective colloids. Four selected probiotics tested are Lactbacillus plantarum B13 and B18, which are the b...

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Main Authors: Abd. Talib, Norfahana, Mohd. Setapar, Siti Hamidah, Khamis, Aidee Kamal, Lee, Nian-Yian, Aziz, Ramlan
Format: Article
Published: 2013
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Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/40765/
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
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spelling my.utm.407652017-08-09T04:11:35Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/40765/ Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application Abd. Talib, Norfahana Mohd. Setapar, Siti Hamidah Khamis, Aidee Kamal Lee, Nian-Yian Aziz, Ramlan Q Science The objective of this study is to verify potential of various types of microorganisms during spray drying and non-refrigerated storage that can be enhanced substantially by selecting suitable protective colloids. Four selected probiotics tested are Lactbacillus plantarum B13 and B18, which are the bacteria probiotics and Kluyveromyces lactis and Saccharomyces blouradii, non-bacteria probiotics. Two levels of experiment occur starting with formulation study of encapsulation agent followed by the viability study of different probiotics after spray dry and two weeks nonrefrigerated storage. The formulation of 30% of gum Arabic, 15% of gelatin and 45% of coconut oil can homogenize well at least for two hours and can produce acceptable dried product (below 4% of moisture content) at low outlet temperature (70? -75?). K. lactis, S. blouradii gives 2.57% and 2.4% of viability percentage after spray drying process and 25.84% and 2.04% after two weeks nonrefrigerated storage respectively. The colonies of non-probiotics bacteria after both conditions are between 1010 and 106 cfu/mL which is among the accepted level for industrial application. However, the survival of probiotics in a spray-dried form during non-refrigerated storage is higher at low of moisture content compared to others. 2013 Article PeerReviewed Abd. Talib, Norfahana and Mohd. Setapar, Siti Hamidah and Khamis, Aidee Kamal and Lee, Nian-Yian and Aziz, Ramlan (2013) Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application. Agricultural Sciences, 4 (5b). pp. 78-83. ISSN 2156-8561
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic Q Science
spellingShingle Q Science
Abd. Talib, Norfahana
Mohd. Setapar, Siti Hamidah
Khamis, Aidee Kamal
Lee, Nian-Yian
Aziz, Ramlan
Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application
description The objective of this study is to verify potential of various types of microorganisms during spray drying and non-refrigerated storage that can be enhanced substantially by selecting suitable protective colloids. Four selected probiotics tested are Lactbacillus plantarum B13 and B18, which are the bacteria probiotics and Kluyveromyces lactis and Saccharomyces blouradii, non-bacteria probiotics. Two levels of experiment occur starting with formulation study of encapsulation agent followed by the viability study of different probiotics after spray dry and two weeks nonrefrigerated storage. The formulation of 30% of gum Arabic, 15% of gelatin and 45% of coconut oil can homogenize well at least for two hours and can produce acceptable dried product (below 4% of moisture content) at low outlet temperature (70? -75?). K. lactis, S. blouradii gives 2.57% and 2.4% of viability percentage after spray drying process and 25.84% and 2.04% after two weeks nonrefrigerated storage respectively. The colonies of non-probiotics bacteria after both conditions are between 1010 and 106 cfu/mL which is among the accepted level for industrial application. However, the survival of probiotics in a spray-dried form during non-refrigerated storage is higher at low of moisture content compared to others.
format Article
author Abd. Talib, Norfahana
Mohd. Setapar, Siti Hamidah
Khamis, Aidee Kamal
Lee, Nian-Yian
Aziz, Ramlan
author_facet Abd. Talib, Norfahana
Mohd. Setapar, Siti Hamidah
Khamis, Aidee Kamal
Lee, Nian-Yian
Aziz, Ramlan
author_sort Abd. Talib, Norfahana
title Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application
title_short Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application
title_full Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application
title_fullStr Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application
title_full_unstemmed Survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application
title_sort survival of encapsulated probiotics through spray drying and non-refrigerated storage for animal feeds application
publishDate 2013
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/40765/
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