| Literature DB >> 35328803 |
Jordy Kim Ung Ling1, Kunn Hadinoto1.
Abstract
Greater awareness of environmental sustainability has driven many industries to transition from using synthetic organic solvents to greener solvents in their manufacturing. Deep eutectic solvents (DESs) have emerged as a highly promising category of green solvents with well-demonstrated and wide-ranging applications, including their use as a solvent in extraction of small-molecule bioactive compounds for food and pharmaceutical applications. The use of DES as an extraction solvent of biological macromolecules, on the other hand, has not been as extensively studied. Thereby, the feasibility of employing DES for biomacromolecule extraction has not been well elucidated. To bridge this gap, this review provides an overview of DES with an emphasis on its unique physicochemical properties that make it an attractive green solvent (e.g., non-toxicity, biodegradability, ease of preparation, renewable, tailorable properties). Recent advances in DES extraction of three classes of biomacromolecules-i.e., proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids-were discussed and future research needs were identified. The importance of DES's properties-particularly its viscosity, polarity, molar ratio of DES components, and water addition-on the DES extraction's performance were discussed. Not unlike the findings from DES extraction of bioactive small molecules, DES extraction of biomacromolecules was concluded to be generally superior to extraction using synthetic organic solvents.Entities:
Keywords: carbohydrates; deep eutectic solvents; extraction; lipids; macromolecules; proteins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35328803 PMCID: PMC8949459 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23063381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Typical natural deep eutectic solvents. Container 1, Sucrose; Container 2, Fructose; Container 3, Glucose; Container 4, Malic acid; Container 5, Sucrose: Fructose: Glucose (1:1:1, molar ratio); Container 6, Sucrose: Malic acid (1:1, molar ratio). The synthesized deep eutectic solvents (container 5 and 6) are liquid in form. Reprinted with permission from [49]. Copyright 2003 American Pharmaceutical Association.
Figure 2Synthesis of choline chloride-HBD DES: hydrogen bond formation. Reprinted with permission from [50].
Figure 3Schematic representation of the DES at the eutectic point. The solid line shows the melting temperature as a function of the mole fraction of components in the mixture and the dashed lines show the temperature and composition of the eutectic mixture. Reprinted with permission from [54].
Melting temperature and viscosity of selected DES.
| HBA | HBD | Molar Ratio (HBA:HBD) | Melting Point (°C) | Viscosity (cP) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CHCL | Urea | 1:2 | 12 1 | 750 (25 °C) 1 | 1 [ |
| CHCL | Ethylene glycol | 1:2 | −66 1 | 36 (20 °C) 2 | 1 [ |
| CHCL | Ethylene glycol | 1:3 | ND | 19 (20 °C) 2 | |
| CHCL | Glycerol | 1:2 | −40 1 | 376 (20 °C) 2 | |
| CHCL | Glycerol | 1:3 | ND | 450 (20 °C) 2 | |
| CHCL | Glycerol | 1:4 | ND | 503 (20 °C) 2 | |
| CHCL | 1,4Butanediol | 1:3 | ND | 140 (20 °C) 2 | |
| CHCL | 1,4Butanediol | 1:4 | ND | 88 (20 °C) 2 | |
| CHCL | Malonic acid | 1:1 | 10 1 | 721 (25 °C) 2 | 1 [ |
| CHCL | Citric acid | 1:1 | 69 | ND | [ |
| CHCL | Oxalic acid | 1:1 | 34 1 | 231 (25 °C) 2 | 1 [ |
| CHCL | Gallic acid | 1:0.5 | 77 | ND | [ |
| CHCL | Ascorbic acid | 2:1 | ND | 51,570 (25 °C) | [ |
| CHCL | Glucose | 1:1 | 31 | 9037 (25 °C) | [ |
| CHCL | Glucose | 2:1 | 15 | 8045 (25 °C) | [ |
| CHCL | Xylitol | 1:1 | Liquid at 25 °C | 5230 (30 °C) | |
| CHCL | Sorbitol | 1:1 | Liquid at 25 °C | 12,730 (30 °C) | |
| Thymol | Camphor | 1:1 | −44 | 25.8 (25 °C) | [ |
| Thymol | 10-Undecylenic acid | 1:1 | 11 | 13.2 (25 °C) | |
| Thymol | Decanoic acid | 1:1 | 17 | 11.2 (25 °C) | |
| Menthol | Acetic acid | 1:1 | −7.81 | 8.69 (25 °C) | [ |
| Menthol | Lactic acid | 1:2 | −61.14 | 218.93 (25 °C) | |
| Menthol | Pyruvic acid | 1:2 | −6.78 | 29.95 (25 °C) | |
| Menthol | Lauric acid | 2:1 | 13.84 | 24.42 (25 °C) | |
| Betaine | Hexafluoro-isopropanol | 1:2 | −39.4 | 76 (25 °C) | [ |
| Betaine | Hexafluoro-isopropanol | 1:3 | −34.7 | 46 (25 °C) | |
| L-carnitine | Hexafluoro-isopropanol | 1:2 | −18.7 | 698 (25 °C) | |
| L-carnitine | Hexafluoro-isopropanol | 1:3 | −17.2 | 149 (25 °C) |
Note: CHCL—choline chloride; ND—not determined.
Figure 4(A) Illustration of DES-based ATPS for the extraction of protein. (B) The conformation of DES and BSA solution are spherical and it is obvious that DES-proteins aggregates were formed after extraction, shown in TEM images of: (a) choline chloride-glycerol DES; (b) BSA; (c,d) BSA in DES-phase. Reprinted with permission from [88].
Summary of the application of DES in extraction of proteins.
| DES | Sample Extract | Operating Conditions | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Protein (solid–liquid extraction) | ||||
| Choline chloride-butanediol | Oat proteins | Extraction temperature: 80 °C |
A total of 55.72% protein content was recovered. The oat proteins extracted by DES have high protein content, solubility, foaming capacity, and stability. | [ |
| Choline chloride-glycerol | Soy proteins | Extraction temperature: 60 °C |
Higher protein yield (0.3462 g) was obtained as compared to the conventional alkali solution acid precipitation method (0.3192 g). The soy protein extracted by DES showed better heat resistance and stronger hydrophobicity than commercial soy proteins. | [ |
| Choline chloride-levulinic acid | Bamboo shoot | Extraction temperature: 80 °C | 39.16 mg/g protein extraction yield was obtained, significantly higher as compared to conventional extraction method using sodium hydroxide (23.88 mg). | [ |
| Carboxylate salt-urea | Proteins from brewer spent grains | Extraction temperature: 80 °C | 79% extraction yield ( | [ |
| Betaine-propylene glycol | Proteins from sardine processing residues | Extraction temperature: 80 °C |
162.2 mg/g protein yield was obtained. The extracts increased the antioxidant and antimicrobial activity by 3-fold and more than 250-fold, respectively, when compared with water. | [ |
| Choline chloride-acetic acid (CHCL: AA) | Proteins from pomegranate peels | Molar ratio of CHCL:AA: 1:2 |
19.2 mg/g of protein was obtained. The hydrolyse obtained from proteins extracted by DES presented high antihypertensive capacity. | [ |
| Choline chloride-polyethylene glycol (PEG) | Pumpkin seed protein | Extraction temperature: 43 °C | The extraction yield was 93.95% ( | [ |
| Protein (liquid–liquid extraction) | ||||
| Choline chloride-glycerol | Bovine serum albumin (BSA) | Amount of DES: 1.3 g |
98.16% of BSA was extracted into the DES-rich phase of ATPS. 32.96% of back-extraction efficiency was achieved. | [ |
| Choline chloride-urea, tetramethylammonium chloride-urea, tetrapropylammonium bromide-urea, choline chloride-methylurea | Bovine serum albumin | Amount of DES: 1.4 g | The extraction efficiency was in the range of 99.94–100.05%. | [ |
| Tetrabutylammonium bromide-glycolic acid | Lysozyme from chicken egg white | Amount of DES: <1.0 g |
>98% of lysozyme was extracted into the DES-rich phase. 91.73% of initial activity of lysozyme was retained after extraction. | [ |
| Tetrabutylammonium chloride-polypropylene glycol 400/L-proline-xylitol | Chymotrypsin | Amount of [TBAC][PPG400]: 1.0 g | 97.30% of extraction efficiency was achieved. | [ |
| Betaine-urea | Bovine serum albumin | Amount of DES: 1.4 g |
98.29% extraction efficiency was achieved. Back-extraction efficiency was 32.66%. | [ |
Summary of the application of DES in extraction of carbohydrates.
| DES | Sample Extract | Operating Conditions | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Choline chloride-glycerol | Alginate and fucoidan from brown seaweed ( | Temperature: 150 °C | 28.1% of alginate and 14.93% of fucoidan was obtained. | [ |
| Choline chloride-1,2-propanediol | Polysaccharide from brown seaweed ( | Molar ratio of CHCL:1,2-propanediol: 1:2 |
11.31% of polysaccharide was obtained. The polysaccharides extracted by using DES have reduced amounts of proteins and minerals. | [ |
| Ethanolamine: | Polysaccharide from | Concentration of DES: 50 wt % |
A total of 92.35 mg/g and recovery yield of 88.09% was obtained. Maintained high extraction yield of 81.79 mg/g and recovery yield of 79.31% even after the fifth cycle. | [ |
| Choline chloride: ethylene glycol | Polysaccharide from lotus leaves | Water content in DES: 61% |
5.38% of extraction yield and 82.10 of total polysaccharide content was obtained. High content of total uronic acids (39.96%) was obtained. | [ |
| Choline chloride: 1,4-butanediol | Polysaccharide from bladderwrack ( | Water content in DES: 32% | 116.33 mg/g extraction yield was attained. | [ |
| Choline chloride: malonic acid | Chitin from lobster shell | Temperature: 50 °C |
Approximately 20.6% extraction yield was obtained. Extracted chitin exhibit crystallinity up to 80.6% and showed porous structure. | [ |
| Choline chloride: citric acid | Pectin from | Temperature: 80 °C |
14.44% of extraction yield was obtained. Extracts contain good functional properties: water holding capacity (3.70 g/g), oil holding capacity (2.40 g/g) and foaming capacity (133.33%). | [ |
Summary of the application of DES in extraction of lipids.
| DES | Sample Extract | Operating Conditions | Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Choline chloride: tartaric acid | Carotenoids from apricot pulps | Ultrasound assisted extraction: |
41.3 mg/g of 76.11 mg/g of | [ |
| Caprylic acid: capric acid (C8:C10) | Carotenoids from pumpkin | Molar ratio of C8: C10 DES: 3:1 Temperature: 50 °C |
151.41 Extracts presented high stability during the period of 180 storage days. | [ |
| Oleic acid:thymol | Astaxanthin from microalgae | Molar ratio of DES: 1:1 Temperature: 60 °C |
Around 60% of astaxanthin recovered and a total of 83% of astaxanthin recovered after 24 h. 40% of the initial astaxanthin content was maintained after 13.5 h of light exposure. | [ |
| Yellow horn seed oil ( | Temperature: 72 °C | 90.33% oil extraction yield and 96.53% of fatty acid methyl esters (FAME) conversion yield was achieved. | [ | |
| Tetrabutylammonium chloride (TBAC):linalool | Terpenoids (linalool) from citrus essential oil | Associative extraction: | Linalool with high purity of 98.6% and recovery ratio of 89.25% was achieved. | [ |
| Nonanoic acid: decanoic acid: lauric acid (C9:C10:C12) | Free fatty acids from spirulina | Molar ratio of C9:C10:C12: 3:2:1 | 58 mg of extraction fraction/g of formulation was obtained, with free fatty acid profile being dominated by saturated free fatty acid (almost 80%) | [ |