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Título
Immobilization of Rhodococcus by encapsulation and entrapment: a green solution to bitter citrus by-products
Autor
Publicado en
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology. 2023, V. 107, n. 20, p. 6377-6388
Editorial
Springer Nature
Fecha de publicación
2023-08
ISSN
0175-7598
DOI
10.1007/s00253-023-12724-9
Abstract
Debittering of citrus by-products is required to obtain value-added compounds for application in the food industry (e.g., dietary fber, bioactive compounds). In this work, the immobilization of Rhodococcus fascians cells by encapsulation in Ca-alginate hollow beads and entrapment in poly(vinyl alcohol)/polyethylene glycol (PVA/PEG) cryogels was studied as an alternative to chemical treatments for degrading the bitter compound limonin. Previously, the Rhodococcus strain was adapted using orange peel extract to increase its tolerance to limonoids. The optimal conditions for the encapsulation of
microbial cells were 2% Na-alginate, 4% CaCl2, 4% carboxymethylcellulose (CMC), and a microbial load of 0.6 OD600 (optical density at 600 nm). For immobilization by entrapment, the optimal conditions were 8% PVA, 8% PEG, and 0.6 OD600 microbial load. Immobilization by entrapment protected microbial cells better than encapsulation against the citrus medium stress conditions (acid pH and composition). Thus, under optimal immobilization conditions, limonin degradation was 32 and 28% for immobilization in PVA/PEG gels and in hollow beads, respectively, in synthetic juice (pH 3) after 72 h at 25 °C. Finally, the microbial cells entrapped in the cryogels showed a higher operational stability in orange juice than the encapsulated cells, with four consecutive cycles of reuse (runs of 24 h at 25 °C).
Palabras clave
Cell immobilization
Ca-alginate hollow beads
PVA/PEG cryogels
Rhodococcus
Debittering
Citrus by-products
Materia
Bioquímica
Biochemistry
Alimentos
Food
Versión del editor
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