Ultrasound-assisted water extraction of mastocarpus stellatus carrageenan with adequate mechanical and antiproliferative properties
DATA:
2021-05-19
IDENTIFICADOR UNIVERSAL: http://hdl.handle.net/11093/2185
VERSIÓN EDITADA: https://www.mdpi.com/1660-3397/19/5/280
MATERIA UNESCO: 3309.03 Antioxidantes en Los Alimentos ; 3328.25 Extracción Sólido - Líquido ; 3303.03 Procesos Químicos
TIPO DE DOCUMENTO: article
RESUMO
Ultrasound-assisted water extraction was optimized to recover gelling biopolymers and antioxidant compounds from Mastocarpus stellatus. A set of experiments following a Box–Behnken design was proposed to study the influence of extraction time, solid liquid ratio, and ultrasound amplitude on the yield, sulfate content, and thermo-rheological properties (viscoelasticity and gelling temperature) of the carrageenan fraction, as well as the composition (protein and phenolic content) and antiradical capacity of the soluble extracts. Operating at 80 °C and 80 kHz, the models predicted a compromise optimum extraction conditions at ~35 min, solid liquid ratio of ~2 g/100 g, and ultrasound amplitude of ~79%. Under these conditions, 40.3% carrageenan yield was attained and this product presented 46% sulfate and good mechanical properties, a viscoelastic modulus of 741.4 Pa, with the lowest gelling temperatures of 39.4 °C. The carrageenans also exhibited promising antiproliferative properties on selected human cancer cellular lines, A-549, A-2780, HeLa 229, and HT-29 with EC50 under 51.9 μg/mL. The dried soluble extract contained 20.4 mg protein/g, 11.3 mg gallic acid eq/g, and the antiradical potency was equivalent to 59 mg Trolox/g.