| Literature DB >> 32066073 |
Lukas Böcker1, Tom Hostettler1, Michael Diener2, Severin Eder3, Teresa Demuth3, Jozef Adamcik2, Kai Reineke4, Elena Leeb4, Laura Nyström3, Alexander Mathys5.
Abstract
Arthrospira platensis, commonly known as Spirulina, gains increasing importance as alternative protein source for food production and biotechnological systems. A promising area is functional high-value algae extracts, rich in phycocyanin, a protein-pigment complex derived from A. platensis. This complex has proven functionality as the only natural blue colorant, fluorescent marker and therapeutic agent. The structure-function relationship is heat sensitive, making thermal processing in its production and its subsequent application a crucial aspect. In continuous high-temperature short-time treatments, it was shown how a purified phycocyanin (mixture of allophycocyanin and c-phycocyanin) disassembled and denatured between 50 and 70 °C. Three characteristic transition temperatures were allocated to specific quaternary aggregates. In contrast to sequential chemical denaturation, phycocyanin's chromophore and protein structure were simultaneously affected by thermal processing. Through a functionality assessment, the findings help optimize the efficiency of raw material usage by defining a processing window, enabling targeted process control resulting in desired product properties.Entities:
Keywords: Biorefinery; Functional microalgae proteins; High-value compound phycocyanin; Pigments; Spirulina; Thermal processing
Year: 2020 PMID: 32066073 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2020.126374
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514