Forest frog's oviduct oil (FFOO) is highly susceptible to microbial spoilage during storage, which causes serious safety concerns and economic losses. However, little information is available regarding the preservation of it up to now. The aim of this research is to understand the dominant microbial community of FFOO spoilage, and based on this, develop a kind of edible nanoemulsion coating for preserving FFOO. Microbial metagenomic analysis indicated that the Aspergillus genus increased significantly during storage. In the present study, gum arabic and whey protein isolate were chosen as the coating matrix, the natural compounds sanguinarine and glabridin were selected as antimicrobial agents to prepare double-layer nanoemulsion edible coating. When the ratio of sanguinarine and glabridin in the nanoemulsion was 1:3, it exhibited strongest storage stability and antifungal activity. The mycelial inhibition rate of 1:3 nanoemulsion against dominant microbial community (Aspergillus niger and Aspergillus glaucus) reached 88.89 ± 1.37 % and 89.68 ± 1.37 %, respectively. The experimental results indicated that the edible nanoemulsion coating not only had outstanding antifungal activity, but also had excellent fresh-keeping effect on FFOO. This nanoemulsion coating could be a promising and potential candidate for food preservation.
Keywords: Double-layer nanoemulsion edible coating; Forest frog's oviduct oil; Gum arabic.
Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.