There may be new hope for people who don’t want potentially-harmful preservatives in their food, yet who still want it to have a decent shelf life. Scientists in Singapore have developed a plant-based food preservative, which they claim is actually more effective than its artificial counterparts.
While previous research indicated that flavonoids additionally showed promise as an antimicrobial agent, they would need to be processed via an expensive and non-sustainable prenylation procedure in order to bring out that quality. The scientists in Chen’s team, however, claim to have developed a method of producing flavonoids that kill bacteria right from the start.
Utilizing a process similar to that used for the production of vaccines, they implanted the flavonoid-producing mechanism from plants into a species of baker’s yeast called Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The yeast responded by producing ready-to-use flavonoids with high antimicrobial and antioxidant properties, both of which are essential to food preservation.
In lab tests, a preservative incorporating the flavonoids was added to samples of fruit juice and meat, which proceeded to last for two days at room temperature before spoiling. By contrast, samples treated with conventional artificial preservatives succumbed to bacterial contamination within just six hours.
The university is now in talks with industrial partners, in order to commercialize the technology. A paper on the research was recently published in the journal Food Chemistry.
Natural preservative could keep foods fresh longer than ever [New Atlas]