The aim of this study was to design an innovative oat fermentation process using capsules to produce postbiotics with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant potential. Capsule fermentation led to higher bacterial growth (3.30*109 CFU/mL) and lactic acid production (20.49 mg/mL), compared to traditional free-cell fermentation (4.73*108 CFU/mL and 9.08 mg/mL, respectively), along with increased cell and product yields. The dried postbiotics were also subjected to in vitro digestion, mimicking the gastrointestinal one. A functional characterization of the four postbiotics, undigested and digested postbiotics from both capsule and free-cell fermentation, was performed using the HCT116 colon cell line. All four products prevented LPS- induced activation of the inflammatory pathway, protein oxidative damage, and impaired glutathione reductase activity, with digested postbiotics being more effective than undigested ones. These findings demonstrate that the capsule-based postbiotic is a promising candidate as a functional food with potential applications in nutraceuticals, animal feeding, and cosmetics.

Beneficial effect of oat-based postbiotics produced through capsule or free-cell fermentation on lipopolysaccharide activated intestinal cells / Lentini, G.; Passannanti, F.; De Palma, F.; Gallo, M.; Petecca, N.; Spagnuolo, M. S.; Budelli, A.; Nigro, R.; Cigliano, L.. - In: FOOD CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0308-8146. - 511:(2026). [10.1016/j.foodchem.2026.148829]

Beneficial effect of oat-based postbiotics produced through capsule or free-cell fermentation on lipopolysaccharide activated intestinal cells

Lentini G.;Passannanti F.;De Palma F.;Gallo M.;Petecca N.;Spagnuolo M. S.;Budelli A.;Nigro R.;Cigliano L.
2026

Abstract

The aim of this study was to design an innovative oat fermentation process using capsules to produce postbiotics with anti-inflammatory and antioxidant potential. Capsule fermentation led to higher bacterial growth (3.30*109 CFU/mL) and lactic acid production (20.49 mg/mL), compared to traditional free-cell fermentation (4.73*108 CFU/mL and 9.08 mg/mL, respectively), along with increased cell and product yields. The dried postbiotics were also subjected to in vitro digestion, mimicking the gastrointestinal one. A functional characterization of the four postbiotics, undigested and digested postbiotics from both capsule and free-cell fermentation, was performed using the HCT116 colon cell line. All four products prevented LPS- induced activation of the inflammatory pathway, protein oxidative damage, and impaired glutathione reductase activity, with digested postbiotics being more effective than undigested ones. These findings demonstrate that the capsule-based postbiotic is a promising candidate as a functional food with potential applications in nutraceuticals, animal feeding, and cosmetics.
2026
Beneficial effect of oat-based postbiotics produced through capsule or free-cell fermentation on lipopolysaccharide activated intestinal cells / Lentini, G.; Passannanti, F.; De Palma, F.; Gallo, M.; Petecca, N.; Spagnuolo, M. S.; Budelli, A.; Nigro, R.; Cigliano, L.. - In: FOOD CHEMISTRY. - ISSN 0308-8146. - 511:(2026). [10.1016/j.foodchem.2026.148829]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11588/1035374
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