Abstract

The marine carotenoid fucoxanthin (FX) has various health benefits but suffers from poor bioavailability. We hypothesize that the bioavailability of FX in microalga Phaeodactylum tricornutum extract (PE) could be improved through nanoencapsulation. Here, we developed two types of nanoparticles: one consisting of alginate and casein (A-C-PE, 246 nm diameter, 79.6% encapsulation efficiency) and the other A-C-PE coated with chitosan (CS-A-C-PE, 258 nm, 78.1%). Both types of nanoparticles incorporating PE showed controlled FX release during simulated gastrointestinal digestion, as well as 1.8-fold improvement of membrane permeability in Caco-2/TC7 cells compared to non-encapsulated PE. Pharmacokinetic behavior of two FX metabolites (fucoxanthinol and amarouciaxanthin A) in mouse plasma was monitored after oral administration. The results showed that 31.8–332.1% more FX metabolites from the nanoparticles were absorbed into plasma than those from PE. In conclusion, encapsulation of PE in both types of nanoparticles significantly promoted the bioavailability of FX.

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