| Line 182: | Line 182: | ||
<p>Hereby, bead-mill (RKM) with subsequent autolysis at pH3 was determined to be the method of | <p>Hereby, bead-mill (RKM) with subsequent autolysis at pH3 was determined to be the method of | ||
choice.</p> | choice.</p> | ||
| − | + | <br><br> | |
<div class="notification"> | <div class="notification"> | ||
<h3 class="title is-5">References</h3> | <h3 class="title is-5">References</h3> | ||
| Line 198: | Line 198: | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
<li>Takeda, “Classification of Chlorella strains by cell wall sugar composition” | <li>Takeda, “Classification of Chlorella strains by cell wall sugar composition” | ||
| + | Phytochemistry, vol. 27, 12, (1988), pp. 3823-3826. | ||
| + | </li> | ||
| + | <li>[4} Takeda, “Classification of Chlorella strains by cell wall sugar composition” | ||
Phytochemistry, vol. 27, 12, (1988), pp. 3823-3826. | Phytochemistry, vol. 27, 12, (1988), pp. 3823-3826. | ||
</li> | </li> | ||
Revision as of 18:07, 20 October 2019
Project
Results
Autolysis in combination with bead-milling Results
Free amino acid estimation with rFAN assay
Samples from Experiment Cell_extraction_with_autolysis_combined_with_bead-milling.pdf were used for the analysis.
Yeast extract is mostly obtained by autolysis 1. In autolysis cells digest their own cell compounds with their own enzymes 2. The idea was to transfer this commonly used principal on algae. Therefore, C. vulgaris and C. sorokiniana were heated to 50 °C in alkaline or acidic environment for 41 h. To further crack the cell wall, both algae were treated with bead-milling afterwards. To quantify the success of cell wall disruption free amino acids were measured with rFAN-assay.
The yield of free amino acids was set into relation with the amount of biomass used in the experiment (figure 1).
The highest amounts of free amino acids were reached with yeast at pH 12 with 4.85 %. Both algae showed very low yield in free amino acids. The best results showed C. sorokiniana at pH 12. It is possible, that the amount of glass beads and the size of the glass beads were to little, which led to less cell wall disruption. Therefore, amino acids would have been retained within the cells. This would explain the little amounts of free amino acids achieved with this method. Also, C. vulgaris and C. sorokinia have a cell wall, in contrast to yeast 3>. Cell walls are harder to break, than a plasma membrane. This could explain the difference between the yeast samples and the algae samples. Due to the low yield in free amino acids, it was decided to investigate other methods for cell extraction of algae.
Anthrone assay to Determine Soluble Carbohydrate Concentration
Similar to the rFAN assay the anthrone assay is a method to detect free monosaccharides in a liquid. Therefor samples from the experiment Experiments_AnthroneAssay.pdf were analyzed. Hereby a calibration curve with known amounts of glucose is created (Figure 2, left side). This calibration curve creates the possibility to calculate the sugar concentration of the samples (Figure 2, right side).
One can tell from the coloring of the samples in figure 2, that the carbohydrate concentration should differ very slightly between the samples pH3, pH6, bead mill extraction +pH3 and bead mill extraction +pH6. Due to the cloudiness of the control sample, a background corrected optical density could not be determined. Therefore, the coloring scheme served as evaluation for successful carbohydrate determination.
Hereby, bead-mill (RKM) with subsequent autolysis at pH3 was determined to be the method of choice.
References
- Kim et al., “Preparation of flavor-enhancing yeast extract using a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain with high RNA content”, Korean J Food Sci Technol, 31 (2) (1999), pp. 475-481.
- T.L. Babayan, M.G. Bezrukov, “Autolysis in yeasts”, Acta Biotechnol, 5 (2) (1985), pp. 129-136.
- van der Rest, M E et al. “The plasma membrane of Saccharomyces cerevisiae: structure, function, and biogenesis.” Microbiological reviews vol. 59,2 (1995): 304-22.
- Takeda, “Classification of Chlorella strains by cell wall sugar composition” Phytochemistry, vol. 27, 12, (1988), pp. 3823-3826.
- [4} Takeda, “Classification of Chlorella strains by cell wall sugar composition” Phytochemistry, vol. 27, 12, (1988), pp. 3823-3826.