Repository logo
 
No Thumbnail Available
Publication

Solubilization and hydrolysis of porcine coagulated blood protein using sub-critical solvent extraction

Use this identifier to reference this record.
Name:Description:Size:Format: 
71380586.pdf1.85 MBAdobe PDF Download

Advisor(s)

Abstract(s)

Pork represents a major fraction of the meat consumed worldwide but only 30% of the blood generated in slaughterhouses is re-used as raw material for food and feed. Innovative technologies and efficient processing strategies capable of generating added-value products from it are now attracting attention. In this study, the hydrolysis of porcine coagulated blood using sub-critical solvent extraction was investigated. Biomass was hydrolyzed using different temperatures (120–210 °C), applying only water (sub-critical water; SCW) or water with a low concentration of alkali (0.1 mol L−1 NaOH) and different reaction times (30–90 min). Resultant hydrolysates were analyzed for crude and soluble protein, peptide profile, and bioactivity by combining protein quantification, antioxidant activity, and fast protein liquid chromatography measurements. Results showed that increasing temperature increases the degree of hydrolysis and that the addition of NaOH enhances the solubilization of peptides with high molecular weights. Also, hydrolysates showed interesting antioxidant activity, being 60 min the time of reaction with best antioxidant activity. Nevertheless, using only water (SCW) as solvent, without chemical additives, allows the delivering of interesting protein-based bioactive fractions. Sub-critical solvent treatment of porcine blood resulted in added-value fractions with potential bioactivities through a simple and environmentally friendly process.

Description

Keywords

Autohydrolysis Circular economy Hydrothermal treatments Meat by-products Protein hydrolysis

Pedagogical Context

Citation

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue