Enzymatic extraction of fucoxanthin from brown seaweeds |
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Authors: | Emer Shannon Nissreen Abu‐Ghannam |
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Affiliation: | Dublin Institute of Technology, School of Food Science and Environmental Health, Dublin, Ireland |
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Abstract: | Brown seaweeds contain a number of bioactive compounds. The xanthophyll, fucoxanthin, has in vivo efficacy against disorders such as type 2 diabetes, obesity and cancer. Organic solvents are traditionally employed to extract fucoxanthin, but carry a toxic chemical and environmental burden. The aim of this study was to optimise a fucoxanthin extraction method using enzymes, water, low‐temperature dehydration and mechanical blending, to produce yields comparable to those achieved with an organic solvent (acetone). Response surface methodology was applied, using Fucus vesiculosus as a model species. A fucoxanthin yield of 0.657 mg g?1 (dry mass) was obtained from F. vesiculosus blade using the enzymatic method, equivalent to 94% of the acetone‐extracted yield. Optimum extraction parameters were determined to be enzyme‐to‐water ratio 0.52%, seaweed‐to‐water ratio 5.37% and enzyme incubation time 3.05 h. These findings may be applied to the development of value‐added nutraceutical products from seaweed. |
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Keywords: | Brown seaweed bioactives enzymatic extraction extraction yield optimisation fucoxanthin green chemistry liquid chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry |
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