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Isolation and Gelling Properties of Duckweed Protein Concentrate

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posted on 2021-05-26, 21:53 authored by Maaike Nieuwland, Peter Geerdink, Nicole P. E. Engelen-Smit, Ingrid M. van der Meer, Antoine H. P. America, Jurriaan J. Mes, A. Maarten J. Kootstra, Jolanda T. M. M. Henket, Wim J. Mulder
An isolation procedure for proteins from duckweed was optimized based on a previously developed method for protein isolation from sugar beet leaves. Optimization included the protocol for disrupting cells and protein recovery. With the optimized protocol, protein was isolated (protein yield 14.2%, RuBisCO yield 27%). The concentrate was off-white and contained 67.2% protein. The isolation procedure resulted in a large enrichment in RuBisCO (from 48% to 92%). Denaturation of duckweed protein concentrate was observed at 62 °C at pH 7, while heating at pH 4 did not show denaturation peaks. Solubility was good far from the iso-electric point and showed a minimum around pH 5. Gelling was better at pH 7 than at pH 4. At pH 7, duckweed gels were much stronger than soy and only slightly weaker compared to egg white protein, while at pH 4 duckweed gel strength was similar to soy and lower than egg white.

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