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Spray-On, Rinse-Off Food ‘Wrapper’ Can Cut Plastic Packaging

2022-07-15
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Packaging is essential for preserving and distributing many kinds of foods, but it often incorporates plastic—scraps of which already litter too much of the planet, posing a threat to wildlife and contaminating drinking water and soil. Now researchers say they have developed a nontoxic, biodegradable and antimicrobial food coating that could reduce food waste and foodborne illness without adding plastic to the environment. A new study shows this material can be effectively sprayed on individual pieces of produce, such as fruits or vegetables. Removing it is as simple as rinsing it off with water.

Protecting edible items from bacteria and other microorganisms reduces spoilage, which is a major factor in food being tossed out. And this kind of waste is a root cause of worldwide hunger: every year roughly one third of food produced across the globe goes to waste. That’s not the only reason to shield produce from germs—some microorganisms are also the sources of illnesses, including listeriosis and Escherichia coli poisoning. Foodborne illnesses cause more than 420,000 estimated deaths worldwide annually.

Unfortunately, packing food to preserve it also adds massively to environmental plastic. “Food packaging is definitely enemy number one when it comes to plastic pollution,” says Win Cowger, an environmental scientist at the Moore Institute for Plastic Pollution Research, who was not involved in the new study. “We can see globally that food packaging is the most abundant plastic material in the environment.” Although the new coating would only replace a portion of the packaging out there—it would not touch some of the greatest offenders, such as water bottles and coffee cup lids—Cowger says any step toward reducing plastic pollution is a good one.

Plastics can stick around in the environment for a long time—potentially forever—but the new coating is biodegradable. That’s because of its primary ingredient: pullulan, an edible fiber that is “generally recognized as safe” (GRAS) by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The coating also incorporates the naturally derived antimicrobial agents citric acid and thyme oil, as well as a bacterially produced compound called nisin, all of which are widely deemed safe for human consumption in the amounts involved. It is described in a new study published this week in Nature Food.

The study researchers used a manufacturing system called focused rotary jet spinning, or FRJS, to generate antimicrobial-laced fibers and apply them to food. Harvard University bioengineer and study co-author Huibin Chang compares the FRJS system to a cotton candy machine, which rapidly spins melted sugar to drive it through small holes, producing fine strands that can be wrapped around a paper cone. FRJS also creates a focused stream of gossamer fibers (made of pullulan in this case rather than flavored sugar) that can be wrapped around a food item—an avocado, for instance. But FRJS—developed in study co-author and bioengineer Kit Parker’s Harvard lab, where Chang is a researcher—was not originally designed for food applications. “When we created this technology, we used it for tissue engineering,” Chang says. For example, he explains, FRJS played a role in his previous work building three-dimensional models of certain heart structures.

The researchers tested the coating on avocados because these fruits are especially prone to uneven ripening and postharvest decay. After being deposited on an avocado via FRJS, the nontoxic pullulan coating could be easily rinsed off in a sink and washed down the drain, the study found. “You can package the avocado at the farm and extend the shelf life, and then you can wash the coating away,” says study co-author Philip Demokritou, a nanoaerosol researcher at Rutgers University and Harvard. Even if the treated object itself is discarded, its coating will degrade in soil in about three days, according to the scientists.

The team also tested how much the coating improved food safety. When the researchers pitted it against common foodborne pathogens, including E. coli, Listeria innocua and Aspergillus fumigatus, they saw a reduction in both bacterial and fungal populations. They also found that avocados with the coating were less likely to rot: just 50 percent of these fruits went bad over the course of a week, compared with 90 percent of the uncoated produce. And the coated avocados were more likely to retain their green internal color.

Although this is not the first antimicrobial food coating, the researchers believe they have created the most effective and easily disposed of option to date. They contend that the spray-on technology requires less starting material, making it more efficient than silk-fiber-based coatings, which require that food first be dipped in the material and then dried. Other attempts at plastic-free food packaging have involved cellulose-based films; these cannot be rinsed off and some even need to be recycled.

The team is currently working on scaling up the coating process to treat multiple pieces of produce at once, Chang says. The scientists are considering several options, including an assembly-line-based system, but this is still in the early stages of planning.

The coating may also need to undergo further safety testing, suggests Nishad Jayasundara, an environmental toxicologist at Duke University, who was not involved with the study. “As a toxicologist,” he says, “the primary thought whenever you see a newly synthesized product is ‘Do we know enough about it?’” For instance, although the coating’s starting materials are nontoxic, washing them down the drain could make them break down into unexpected by-products.

Jayasundara says he is generally encouraged by the new study results. “It’s always very exciting when you have biodegradable material that can replace or reduce plastics at any level possible,” he says. But he is hesitant to celebrate just yet. Although the FDA has given pullulan the agency’s GRAS designation, Jayasundara cautions that whenever there are modifications to a material—even with natural additives such as the antimicrobials the researchers used—it is important to evaluate their safety to human health using a range of tests.

“When we first thought about plastics, they were deemed pretty safe molecules,” Jayasundara notes. “But over time we realized, ‘Oh, actually, no, that’s not the case.’ Now we know that plastics at all levels, regardless of the size, have cellular-level effects, molecular-level effects and ecosystem-level effects.”

参考译文
喷上冲洗掉的食品“包装”可以切割塑料包装
包装对于保存和分发许多种类的食物都是必不可少的,但包装中往往含有塑料碎片,这些塑料碎片已经在地球上造成了太多的垃圾,对野生动物构成了威胁,并污染了饮用水和土壤。现在,研究人员表示,他们已经开发出一种无毒、可生物降解和抗菌的食品涂层,可以在不向环境中添加塑料的情况下减少食物浪费和食源性疾病。一项新的研究表明,这种材料可以有效地喷洒在单个农产品上,如水果或蔬菜。去除它很简单,只要用水冲洗就可以了。保护可食用食品不受细菌和其他微生物的影响,可以减少腐败,这是导致食物被丢弃的一个主要因素。这种浪费是造成全球饥饿的根本原因:每年,全球生产的粮食约有三分之一被浪费。这并不是保护农产品免受细菌侵害的唯一原因——一些微生物也是疾病的来源,包括李斯特菌病和大肠杆菌中毒。据估计,食源性疾病每年导致全球超过42万人死亡。不幸的是,为了保存食物而进行包装也会大量增加环保塑料。摩尔塑料污染研究所(Moore Institute for plastic pollution Research)的环境科学家温·考格(Win Cowger)说:“谈到塑料污染,食品包装绝对是头号敌人。”他没有参与这项新研究。“我们可以在全球范围内看到,食品包装是环境中最丰富的塑料材料。”虽然新涂层只会取代包装的一部分——它不会触及一些最严重的违者,如水瓶和咖啡杯盖子——考格说,任何减少塑料污染的步骤都是好的。塑料可以在环境中存在很长一段时间——可能是永远——但这种新涂层是可生物降解的。这是因为它的主要成分:普鲁兰,一种被美国食品和药物管理局(Food and Drug Administration,简称GRAS)“普遍认为是安全的”食用纤维。这种涂层还含有天然衍生的抗菌剂柠檬酸和百里香油,以及一种由细菌产生的名为nisin的化合物,所有这些物质都被广泛认为对人类食用是安全的。本周发表在《自然食品》杂志上的一项新研究对此进行了描述。研究人员使用了一种名为聚焦旋转喷射纺丝(FRJS)的制造系统,来产生具有抗菌作用的纤维,并将其应用于食物中。哈佛大学(Harvard University)生物工程师、该研究的共同作者常慧斌(Huibin Chang)将FRJS系统比作棉花糖机,后者可以快速旋转融化的糖,使其穿过小孔,产生可以缠绕在纸锥上的细线。FRJS还能制造出一种集中的游丝纤维流(在这种情况下是由普鲁兰而不是调味糖制成的),可以包裹在食物上——比如牛油果。但是frjs——由该研究的合著者、生物工程师Kit Parker的哈佛实验室开发,Chang是该实验室的研究人员——最初并不是为食品应用而设计的。“当我们创造这项技术时,我们将其用于组织工程,”Chang说。例如,他解释说,FRJS在他之前构建特定心脏结构的三维模型的工作中发挥了作用。研究人员在牛油果上测试了这种涂层,因为这些水果特别容易不均匀成熟和收获后腐烂。研究发现,这种无毒的普鲁兰涂层通过FRJS沉积在牛油果上后,可以很容易地在水槽中冲洗掉,然后被冲进下水道。“你可以在农场包装牛油果,延长保质期,然后你可以洗掉涂层,”该研究的合著者、罗格斯大学和哈佛大学的纳米气溶胶研究员菲利普·德莫克里托说。据科学家说,即使处理过的物体本身被丢弃,它的涂层也会在大约3天内在土壤中降解。 该团队还测试了这种涂层在多大程度上改善了食品安全。当研究人员将其与常见的食源性病原体(包括大肠杆菌、innocua李斯特菌和烟曲霉)进行比较时,他们发现细菌和真菌的数量都减少了。他们还发现,有涂层的牛油果不太容易腐烂:只有50%的牛油果在一周内变坏,相比之下,没有涂层的牛油果在一周内变坏的比例为90%。涂有涂层的牛油果更有可能保持它们内部的绿色。虽然这不是第一种抗菌食品涂层,但研究人员相信他们创造了迄今为止最有效、最容易处理的选择。他们认为,这种喷涂技术需要的初始材料更少,比以丝纤维为基础的涂层更有效,后者要求食品先浸泡在材料中,然后干燥。其他无塑料食品包装的尝试包括纤维素薄膜;它们不能被冲洗掉,有些甚至需要回收利用。Chang说,该团队目前正致力于扩大涂层工艺,以一次处理多个农产品。科学家们正在考虑几种选择,包括基于流水线的系统,但这仍处于计划的早期阶段。未参与这项研究的杜克大学环境毒理学家Nishad Jayasundara表示,这种涂层可能还需要进行进一步的安全测试。“作为一名毒理学家,”他说,“当你看到一种新合成的产品时,首要的想法是‘我们对它了解足够多吗?’”例如,尽管涂层的起始材料是无毒的,但把它们冲进下水道可能会使它们分解成意想不到的副产品。Jayasundara说,他对新的研究结果普遍感到鼓舞。他说:“当你有生物可降解材料可以在任何程度上替代或减少塑料时,这总是非常令人兴奋的。”但他现在还不愿庆祝。尽管FDA已将普鲁兰命名为GRAS物质,但Jayasundara警告说,无论什么时候对一种物质进行修改——即使添加了天然添加剂,如研究人员使用的抗菌剂——通过一系列测试来评估其对人类健康的安全性是很重要的。Jayasundara指出:“当我们第一次想到塑料时,它们被认为是相当安全的分子。“但随着时间的推移,我们意识到,‘哦,实际上,不是这样的。“现在我们知道,无论大小,所有层面的塑料都有细胞层面的效应、分子层面的效应和生态系统层面的效应。”
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