Non-Conventional Extraction of Bovine Lactoperoxidase From Whey
Date
2022
Authors
Karanth, Shwetha
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Food spoilage is a global industrial issue, and consumers are vary of the ill-effects of
chemical preservatives. Bovine Lactoperoxidase (LP- EC 1.11.1.7), a natural
antimicrobial, is used as bio preservative. Industries are pursuing new purification
methods as conventional techniques like chromatography and membrane separation
suffer drawbacks. The present work investigates the use of non-conventional liquid-
liquid extraction (LLE) techniques to extract and purify LP. The stability of LP was
explored in various phase forming components of LLE, viz. polymers, surfactants,
salts sugars, polyols, and alcohols. The surfactant systems showed compatibility, and
the Reverse Micellar Extraction (RME) was studied to extract the LP from aqueous
solution using systems formed by ionic and non-ionic surfactant mixtures to reduce
the denaturation of LP. Tween series surfactants with Aerosol-OT (bis-(2-ethylhexyl)
sulfosuccinate) showed better extraction than Triton and Span series. Complete
extraction of LP occurred with the RM formed by 90mM Aerosol-OT/8 mM Tween
80 in isooctane and a maximum of 95.5% back extraction efficiency with 66% active
LP recovered using pH of 10.5, 1M KCl, and 60 mM cetyltrimethylammonium
bromide system. Further, selective RME of LP was extended to whey. A maximum of
86% LP was extracted from acid whey at pH 9.5 with the addition of 0.2M KCl, using
115 AOTmM / Tween 80 23mM surfactant blends in the organic phase. Active LP of
80% with 112% extraction efficiency was achieved with a stripping phase of 1.5M
KCl at pH 10.5 and 60 mM CTAB in the organic phase.Further, Rhamnolipid-based
RME was studied to avoid the adverse effect of synthetic surfactants. A novel back
extraction strategy using pH-specific protonation – deprotonation of the Rhamnolipid
headgroups was used during back extraction. The optimized extraction conditions
resulted in 96.65% LP extraction and 85.71% active LP recovery with 8.4 fold
purification. The recovered LP from acid whey studies was qualitatively analyzed
using RP-HPLC. The antimicrobial activity of the extracted LP showed a good
reduction in colony-forming units of S. aureus and specifically exhibited a
bacteriostatic effect.
Description
Keywords
Whey protein, bioseparation, surfactant, reverse micelle extraction, purification