| Literature DB >> 35335495 |
Mansuri M Tosif1, Agnieszka Najda2, Joanna Klepacka3, Aarti Bains4, Prince Chawla1, Ankur Kumar5, Minaxi Sharma6, Kandi Sridhar7, Surya Prakash Gautam4, Ravinder Kaushik8.
Abstract
Taro (Colocasia esculenta) is an important source of carbohydrates as an energy source and is used as a staple food throughout the world. It is rich in mucilage and starch granules, making it a highly digestible ingredient. Mucilage can act as a matrix and a thickening, binding, emulsifying, or foaming agent in food, pharmaceutical, and several other fields of research. Moreover, mucilage can be extracted from several living organisms and has excellent functional properties, such as water-holding, oil-holding, and swelling capacities. Therefore, these remarkable functional properties make mucilage a promising ingredient with possible industrial applications. Furthermore, several extraction techniques, including enzyme-assisted, ultrasonication, microwave-assisted, aquatic, and solvent extraction methods, are used to obtain quantitative amounts of taro mucilage. Coldwater extraction with ethanol precipitation can be considered an effective and cost-effective technique to obtain high-quality mucilage with suitable industrial applications, whereas the ultrasonication method is more expensive but results in a higher amount of mucilage than other emerging techniques. Mucilage can also be used as a fat replacer or reducer, dye remover, coating agent, and antioxidating agent. Therefore, in this review, we detail the key properties related to the extraction techniques, chemical composition, and characterization of taro mucilage, along with its suitable applications and health benefits.Entities:
Keywords: biopolymer; food applications; mucilage; polysaccharide
Year: 2022 PMID: 35335495 PMCID: PMC8949670 DOI: 10.3390/polym14061163
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Various extraction methods, yields, and chemical compositions of taro mucilage.
| Extraction Method | Extraction Condition | Yield of Mucilage | Chemical Composition | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solvent treatment (ethyl alcohol), high- and low-temperature methods, filtration, and lyophilization | Mucilage was extracted at different five conditions (a) at room temperature, (b) at room temperature with ethanol precipitation, (c) at high temperature, (d) at high temperature with ethanol precipitation, and (e) at low temperature with ethanol precipitation | (a) 8.05% | Amino acids (proline, alanine, threonine, lysine, tyrosine, valine, phenylalanine, glycine, serine, arginine, and leucine)Monosaccharides (galactose, arabinose, and glucose) | [ |
| Filtration and lyophilization | Filtrated mucilage was lyophilized for 72 h | 9.63% | Amino acids (leucine, isoleucine, cysteine, tryptophan, and lysine) and monosaccharides (xylose, rhamnose, arabinose, fucose, mannose, galactose, fructose, and glucose. | [ |
| Coldwater, filtration, and centrifugation | The filtrate was centrifuged at 13,000× | 3.23% | Monosaccharides (arabinose, galactose, mannose, and rhamnose) | [ |
| Coldwater, filtration, and centrifugation | The filtrate was centrifuged at 5000× | 4.44% | Monosaccharides (glucose, galactose, arabinose, xylose, mannose, and glucuronic acid) | [ |
| Solvent treatment | Six varieties were used to extract mucilage in a saline buffer containing 50 mM Tris pH 8, supplemented with solvents. The mixture was incubated overnight at 4 °C with agitation followed by centrifugation at 3000× | 3–18% | Sugars (arabinose, rhamnose, fucose, xylose, galacturonic acid, guluronic acid, mannose, galactose, and glucose) | [ |
| High temperature | Mucilage was extracted by using two different solvents (a) methanol (b) acetone | 9.4%1.2% | - | [ |
Figure 1Schematic representation diagram of the extraction of taro mucilage at low temperature with ethanol precipitation.
Figure 2Chemical structures of different amino acids present in taro mucilage.
Figure 3Proposed mechanism of emulsifying action of taro mucilage.
Figure 4Application of taro mucilage as a fat replacer in bakery products.