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Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development

Maize husks, an agricultural and industrial residue generated in a large volume, were investigated as a potential source of useful biopolymers. Thus, their chemical composition was firstly studied, after which two biopolymer products were obtained and characterized. Maize husks were dried and milled...

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Autores principales: Bernhardt, Dana C., Ponce, Nora M.A., Basanta, Maria F., Stortz, Carlos A., Rojas, Ana M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6411502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30906893
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e01313
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author Bernhardt, Dana C.
Ponce, Nora M.A.
Basanta, Maria F.
Stortz, Carlos A.
Rojas, Ana M.
author_facet Bernhardt, Dana C.
Ponce, Nora M.A.
Basanta, Maria F.
Stortz, Carlos A.
Rojas, Ana M.
author_sort Bernhardt, Dana C.
collection PubMed
description Maize husks, an agricultural and industrial residue generated in a large volume, were investigated as a potential source of useful biopolymers. Thus, their chemical composition was firstly studied, after which two biopolymer products were obtained and characterized. Maize husks were dried and milled, obtaining a 210 μm-main particle size powder (MHP). It contained carotenes (4 mg/100 g), and exhibited antioxidant capacity (≈195 mg ascorbic acid/100 g MHP) coming also from extractable coumaric and cinnamic acids-derivatives (14 mg/100 g). A 31% of the MPH was water-soluble at room temperature, mainly constituted by fructose, glucose, and sorbitol of mesophylls' intracellular origin. The water insoluble fiber (WIF, ≈70%), which showed antioxidant capacity (≈25–33 mg ascorbic acid/100 g WIF), was almost entirely constituted by the cell wall biopolymers or alcohol insoluble residue (AIR) of the MPH, mostly arabinoxylans (≈26%) crosslinked by ferulic residues (18.6 mg/100 g MPH), and cellulose (26%). Low levels of pectins (5.5%) and lignin (7%) were found. Hence, a 1.25%-sulfur nanocellulose (NCC) was directly obtained with sulfuric acid (−15 mV Zeta-potential; 147 °C onset of thermal-degradation) without the necessity of previous delignification. On the other hand, a water soluble arabinoxylan enriched fraction (AX-EF) with pseudoplastic behavior in water and sensibility to calcium ions (≈3 Pa⋅s initial Newtonian-viscosity) was isolated by alkaline hydrolysis of diferulate bridges. Despite a 56% of crystallinity, NCC showed the highest water absorption capacity when compared to that of the AX-EF and AIR. Maize husks constitute an important source of biopolymers for development of materials and food additives/ingredients with relevant hydration and antioxidant properties.
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spelling pubmed-64115022019-03-22 Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development Bernhardt, Dana C. Ponce, Nora M.A. Basanta, Maria F. Stortz, Carlos A. Rojas, Ana M. Heliyon Article Maize husks, an agricultural and industrial residue generated in a large volume, were investigated as a potential source of useful biopolymers. Thus, their chemical composition was firstly studied, after which two biopolymer products were obtained and characterized. Maize husks were dried and milled, obtaining a 210 μm-main particle size powder (MHP). It contained carotenes (4 mg/100 g), and exhibited antioxidant capacity (≈195 mg ascorbic acid/100 g MHP) coming also from extractable coumaric and cinnamic acids-derivatives (14 mg/100 g). A 31% of the MPH was water-soluble at room temperature, mainly constituted by fructose, glucose, and sorbitol of mesophylls' intracellular origin. The water insoluble fiber (WIF, ≈70%), which showed antioxidant capacity (≈25–33 mg ascorbic acid/100 g WIF), was almost entirely constituted by the cell wall biopolymers or alcohol insoluble residue (AIR) of the MPH, mostly arabinoxylans (≈26%) crosslinked by ferulic residues (18.6 mg/100 g MPH), and cellulose (26%). Low levels of pectins (5.5%) and lignin (7%) were found. Hence, a 1.25%-sulfur nanocellulose (NCC) was directly obtained with sulfuric acid (−15 mV Zeta-potential; 147 °C onset of thermal-degradation) without the necessity of previous delignification. On the other hand, a water soluble arabinoxylan enriched fraction (AX-EF) with pseudoplastic behavior in water and sensibility to calcium ions (≈3 Pa⋅s initial Newtonian-viscosity) was isolated by alkaline hydrolysis of diferulate bridges. Despite a 56% of crystallinity, NCC showed the highest water absorption capacity when compared to that of the AX-EF and AIR. Maize husks constitute an important source of biopolymers for development of materials and food additives/ingredients with relevant hydration and antioxidant properties. Elsevier 2019-03-08 /pmc/articles/PMC6411502/ /pubmed/30906893 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e01313 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bernhardt, Dana C.
Ponce, Nora M.A.
Basanta, Maria F.
Stortz, Carlos A.
Rojas, Ana M.
Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development
title Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development
title_full Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development
title_fullStr Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development
title_full_unstemmed Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development
title_short Husks of Zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development
title_sort husks of zea mays as a potential source of biopolymers for food additives and materials' development
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6411502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30906893
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e01313
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