2009
DOI: 10.2174/1874070700903010009
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Pectin and Pectinases: Production, Characterization and Industrial Application of Microbial Pectinolytic Enzymes

Abstract: Pectinases are a big group of enzymes that break down pectic polysaccharides of plant tissues into simpler molecules like galacturonic acids. It has long been used to increase yields and clarity of fruit juices. Since pectic substances are a very complex macromolecule group, various pectinolytic enzymes are required to degrade it completely. These enzymes present differences in their cleavage mode and specificity being basically classified into two main groups that act on pectin "smooth" regions or on pectin "… Show more

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Cited by 287 publications
(149 citation statements)
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“…Pectic enzymes consist primarily of pectin methyl esterase, polygalacturonase and pectate lyase (Kawano et al, 1999;Verlent et al, 2004). Pectin methyl esterase (PME) catalyzes the removal of methyl groups at C-6 from esterified anhydrogalacturonosyl units in HG and methanol is released and enzyme is active on methyl esters, where there is a free adjacent carboxyl group (Pedrolli et al, 2009). Polygalacturonases catalyze the hydrolysis of α-(1→4)-glycosidic bonds between adjacent non-esterified D-GalpA units in HG, which leads to substrate depolymerization and viscosity reduction.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pectic enzymes consist primarily of pectin methyl esterase, polygalacturonase and pectate lyase (Kawano et al, 1999;Verlent et al, 2004). Pectin methyl esterase (PME) catalyzes the removal of methyl groups at C-6 from esterified anhydrogalacturonosyl units in HG and methanol is released and enzyme is active on methyl esters, where there is a free adjacent carboxyl group (Pedrolli et al, 2009). Polygalacturonases catalyze the hydrolysis of α-(1→4)-glycosidic bonds between adjacent non-esterified D-GalpA units in HG, which leads to substrate depolymerization and viscosity reduction.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These are mainly degraded by a group of enzymes referred to as pectinases, which have been classified according to their mode of action and substrate preference into pectin esterases (EC 3.1.1.11), polygalacturonases (PGs; EC 3.2.1.15), pectate lyases (EC 4.2.2.2) and pectin lyases (EC 4.2.2.10) (Yadav et al 2009). Pectinases have been extensively reviewed and have potential applications in clarification of fruit juices, retting of fibre, treatment of pectic waste water, coffee and tea leaf fermentation, oil extraction and virus purifications (Jayani et al 2005;Satyanarayana & Kumar 2005;Payasi et al 2008;Pedrolli et al 2009). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Pectin substrate is a complex polysaccharide presents in all plants in the middle lamella of primary cell wall consisting mainly of galacturonic acid residues linked with an α(1-4) glucosidic bond (Pedrolli et al, 2009;Kothari and Baig, 2013). The acid groups are largely esterified with methyl groups.…”
Section: Pectin Degrading Enzymesmentioning
confidence: 99%