Abstract:The effects of process variables such as enzyme types, enzyme ratio, reaction temperature, pH, time, and ethanol concentration on the extraction of unripe apple polyphenol were investigated. The results indicated that Viscozyme L had the strongest effect on polyphenols extraction and was selected to study the polyphenol composition. The ratio of enzyme (Viscozyme L) to substrate (2 fungal beta-glucanase units (FBG)) at 0.02, reaction at pH 3.7, 50 °C for 12 h, and ethanol concentration of 70% were chosen as the most favorable extraction condition. Total phenolic content (TPC), reducing sugar content (RSC), and extraction yield increased by about 3, 1.5, and 2 times, respectively, compared with control. The contents of p-coumaric acid, ferulic acid, and caffeic acid increased to 8, 4, and 32 times, respectively. The enzyme-aided polyphenol extraction process from unripe apples might be applied to food industry for enhancing bioactive compound production.
In this study, the antioxidant flavonoid, myricitrin, was isolated and identified from Daebong persimmon peel. The persimmon peel extract was successively fractionated with n-hexane, ethyl acetate, and n-butanol. The ethyl acetate fraction had the strongest antioxidant activities among the solvent fractions and was further fractionated by silica gel and octadecylsilane column chromatography, and preparative high performance liquid chromatography. Three antioxidant compounds were finally isolated, and compound 2 was identified as myricitrin by liquid chromatography/mass spectrometry and 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance. Myricitrin had the strongest antioxidant activities by ferric ion reducing antioxidant power and α,α-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging assays. These results suggested that myricitrin was found as a major antioxidant flavonoid responsible for the strong antioxidant activities of Daebong persimmon peels.
In this study, the high-pressure steaming and enzymatic pre-treatment (SET) was used to improve bglucan extraction from Ganoderma lucidum (G. lucidum), an oriental medicinal mushroom. Response surface methodology and central composite design were used to determine the optimum pre-treatment conditions: highpressure steaming, enzymatic hydrolysis, and Viscozyme L concentrations. The optimal conditions were 15.51 min for high-pressure steaming, 0.84 g/100 mL of Viscozyme L, and 4.16 h for hydrolysis. The predicted b-glucan content in G. lucidum extract at optimal conditions, approximately twofold (8.05 g/100 g) of the control treatment value, was consistent with the empirical value. The total sugar and protein contents through SET were higher than those values of the control treatment. The cell migration assay showed that SET-processed G. lucidum extracts significantly suppressed B16F10 murine melanoma cell growth. SET process using Viscozyme L could be utilized for bglucan extraction from G. lucidum to develop the functional food.
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