Fungal oxidative and hydrolyzing enzymes as designers in the biological production of dietary fibers from triticale
Abstract
There is an urgent need to increase the daily intake of insoluble dietary fiber, and at the same time to find new sources and new production technologies. We hypothesized that fungal enzymes directly involved in lignocellulosic material hydrolysis (Aspergillus and Trichoderma enzyme cocktails) will change the fiber structure particularly efficiently after the action of laccase (Trametes versicolor enzyme cocktail). Enzymes production on an inducing substrate (same as starting material for obtainment of insoluble dietary fibers) and their usage resulted in obtainment of novel insoluble dietary fibers with better characteristics, 24% higher swelling, 43% higher WRC and 57% higher ORC compared to insoluble dietary fibers from triticale (already proven to be a good food additive). Changes in structure were analyzed by FTIR and microscopic analysis. Antioxidative performance of the obtained products, new insoluble and released soluble dietary fibers, was analyzed in detail. Newly obtained s...oluble dietary fibers demonstrated up to 20 times higher antioxidant activity compared to untreated fibers (ABTS and DPPH tests). These results suggest their good performance as a future food additive. At the same time, they prove the hypothesis that the use of enzyme cocktails rich in laccase is a good choice for biological pretreatment in this process.
Keywords:
Antioxidant activity / Dietary fibers / Enzymatic treatment / Fungal enzyme cocktails / Aspergillus / Enzymes / Fibers / Food additives / Hydrolysis / Substrates / Antioxidant activities / Dietary fibre / Enzymatic treatments / Enzyme cocktails / Fungal enzyme cocktail / Insoluble dietary fibers / Laccases / Oxidative enzymes / Performance / Soluble dietary fiber / AntioxidantsSource:
LWT - Food Science and Technology, 2021, 145, 111291-Publisher:
- Elsevier
Funding / projects:
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200168 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Chemistry) (RS-200168)
- Unapređenje tehnologije konvencionalnog sušenja drveta sa aspekta kvaliteta i utroška energije (RS-20026)
Note:
- Supplementary data: https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4799
Related info:
- Referenced by
https://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4799
DOI: 10.1016/j.lwt.2021.111291
ISSN: 0023-6438; 1096-1127
WoS: 000663364900008
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85102790289
Collections
Institution/Community
Hemijski fakultet / Faculty of ChemistryTY - JOUR AU - Margetić, Aleksandra AU - Stojanović, Sanja AU - Ristović, Marina AU - Vujčić, Zoran AU - Dojnov, Biljana PY - 2021 UR - http://cherry.chem.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4801 AB - There is an urgent need to increase the daily intake of insoluble dietary fiber, and at the same time to find new sources and new production technologies. We hypothesized that fungal enzymes directly involved in lignocellulosic material hydrolysis (Aspergillus and Trichoderma enzyme cocktails) will change the fiber structure particularly efficiently after the action of laccase (Trametes versicolor enzyme cocktail). Enzymes production on an inducing substrate (same as starting material for obtainment of insoluble dietary fibers) and their usage resulted in obtainment of novel insoluble dietary fibers with better characteristics, 24% higher swelling, 43% higher WRC and 57% higher ORC compared to insoluble dietary fibers from triticale (already proven to be a good food additive). Changes in structure were analyzed by FTIR and microscopic analysis. Antioxidative performance of the obtained products, new insoluble and released soluble dietary fibers, was analyzed in detail. Newly obtained soluble dietary fibers demonstrated up to 20 times higher antioxidant activity compared to untreated fibers (ABTS and DPPH tests). These results suggest their good performance as a future food additive. At the same time, they prove the hypothesis that the use of enzyme cocktails rich in laccase is a good choice for biological pretreatment in this process. PB - Elsevier T2 - LWT - Food Science and Technology T1 - Fungal oxidative and hydrolyzing enzymes as designers in the biological production of dietary fibers from triticale VL - 145 SP - 111291 DO - 10.1016/j.lwt.2021.111291 ER -
@article{ author = "Margetić, Aleksandra and Stojanović, Sanja and Ristović, Marina and Vujčić, Zoran and Dojnov, Biljana", year = "2021", abstract = "There is an urgent need to increase the daily intake of insoluble dietary fiber, and at the same time to find new sources and new production technologies. We hypothesized that fungal enzymes directly involved in lignocellulosic material hydrolysis (Aspergillus and Trichoderma enzyme cocktails) will change the fiber structure particularly efficiently after the action of laccase (Trametes versicolor enzyme cocktail). Enzymes production on an inducing substrate (same as starting material for obtainment of insoluble dietary fibers) and their usage resulted in obtainment of novel insoluble dietary fibers with better characteristics, 24% higher swelling, 43% higher WRC and 57% higher ORC compared to insoluble dietary fibers from triticale (already proven to be a good food additive). Changes in structure were analyzed by FTIR and microscopic analysis. Antioxidative performance of the obtained products, new insoluble and released soluble dietary fibers, was analyzed in detail. Newly obtained soluble dietary fibers demonstrated up to 20 times higher antioxidant activity compared to untreated fibers (ABTS and DPPH tests). These results suggest their good performance as a future food additive. At the same time, they prove the hypothesis that the use of enzyme cocktails rich in laccase is a good choice for biological pretreatment in this process.", publisher = "Elsevier", journal = "LWT - Food Science and Technology", title = "Fungal oxidative and hydrolyzing enzymes as designers in the biological production of dietary fibers from triticale", volume = "145", pages = "111291", doi = "10.1016/j.lwt.2021.111291" }
Margetić, A., Stojanović, S., Ristović, M., Vujčić, Z.,& Dojnov, B.. (2021). Fungal oxidative and hydrolyzing enzymes as designers in the biological production of dietary fibers from triticale. in LWT - Food Science and Technology Elsevier., 145, 111291. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lwt.2021.111291
Margetić A, Stojanović S, Ristović M, Vujčić Z, Dojnov B. Fungal oxidative and hydrolyzing enzymes as designers in the biological production of dietary fibers from triticale. in LWT - Food Science and Technology. 2021;145:111291. doi:10.1016/j.lwt.2021.111291 .
Margetić, Aleksandra, Stojanović, Sanja, Ristović, Marina, Vujčić, Zoran, Dojnov, Biljana, "Fungal oxidative and hydrolyzing enzymes as designers in the biological production of dietary fibers from triticale" in LWT - Food Science and Technology, 145 (2021):111291, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lwt.2021.111291 . .
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Supplementary data for the article: Margetić, A.; Stojanović, S.; Ristović, M.; Vujčić, Z.; Dojnov, B. Fungal Oxidative and Hydrolyzing Enzymes as Designers in the Biological Production of Dietary Fibers from Triticale. LWT 2021, 145, 111291. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lwt.2021.111291.
Margetić, Aleksandra; Stojanović, Sanja; Ristović, Marina; Vujčić, Zoran; Dojnov, Biljana (Elsevier, 2021) -
Supplementary material for: Dodevska, M.; Kukić-Marković, J.; Sofrenić, I.; Tešević, V.; Janković, M.; Đorđević, B.; Ivanović, N. Similarities and Differences in the Nutritional Composition of Nuts and Seeds in Serbia. Frontiers in Nutrition 2022, 9. https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.1003125.
Dodevska, Margarita; Kukić-Marković, Jelena; Sofrenić, Ivana V.; Tešević, Vele; Janković, Milica; Đorđević, Brižita; Ivanović, Nevena (Frontiers Media S.A., 2022) -
Similarities and differences in the nutritional composition of nuts and seeds in Serbia
Dodevska, Margarita; Kukić-Marković, Jelena; Sofrenić, Ivana V.; Tešević, Vele; Janković, Milica; Đorđević, Brižita; Ivanović, Nevena (Frontiers Media S.A., 2022)