Title of article :
Enzyme-aided extraction of lycopene from high-pigment tomato cultivars by supercritical carbon dioxide
Author/Authors :
Lenucci، نويسنده , , Marcello Salvatore and De Caroli، نويسنده , , Monica and Marrese، نويسنده , , Pier Paolo and Iurlaro، نويسنده , , Andrea and Rescio، نويسنده , , Leonardo and Bِhm، نويسنده , , Volker and Dalessandro، نويسنده , , Giuseppe and Piro، نويسنده , , Gabriella، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Abstract :
This work reports a novel enzyme-assisted process for lycopene concentration into a freeze-dried tomato matrix and describes the results of laboratory scale lycopene supercritical CO2 (SC-CO2) extractions carried out with untreated (control) and enzyme-digested matrices. The combined use of food-grade commercial plant cell-wall glycosidases (Celluclast/Novozyme plus Viscozyme) allows to increase lycopene (∼153%) and lipid (∼137%) concentration in the matrix and rises substrate load onto the extraction vessel (∼46%) compared to the control. The addition of an oleaginous co-matrix (hazelnut seeds) to the tomato matrix (1:1 by weight) increases CO2 diffusion through the highly dense enzyme-treated matrix bed and provides lipids that are co-extracted increasing lycopene yield. Under the same operative conditions (50 MPa, 86 °C, 4 mL min−1 SC-CO2 flow) extraction yield from control and Celluclast/Novozyme + Viscozyme-treated tomato matrix/co-matrix mixtures was similar, exceeding 75% after 4.5 h of extraction. However, the total extracted lycopene was ∼3 times higher in enzyme-treated matrix than control.
Keywords :
Cell-wall hydrolases , Enzymatic digestion , Freeze-dried tomato matrix , green chemistry , Lycopersicon esculentum (Mill.) , Oleoresin , carotenoids
Journal title :
Food Chemistry
Journal title :
Food Chemistry