Research Article | OPEN ACCESS
Effect of Extraction Methods on Polysaccharide of Clitocybe maxima Stipe
Junchen Chen, Pufu Lai, Hengsheng Shen, Hengguang Zhen and Rutao Fang
Research Institute of Agri-engneering Technology, Fujian Academy of Agricultural
Sciences, Fuzhou, 350003, P.R. China
Advance Journal of Food Science and Technology 2013 3:370-373
Received: December 17, 2012 | Accepted: January 19, 2013 | Published: March 15, 2013
Abstract
Clitocybe maxima (Gartn. ex Mey. Fr.) Quél. is a favorable edible fungi species. The proportion of its stipe is about 45% of entire fruit biomass, which is a low value defined byproduct. To increase its value added utilization, three extraction methods (as hot water, microwave-assisted and complex-enzyme-hydrolysis-assist) were conducted. The extraction effect on the polysaccharide of Clitocybe maxima stipe was compared and the processing conditions in extraction were optimized. The content of polysaccharide was determined with Phenol Sulfuric Acid Method. With three methods, the extraction yield and the polysaccharide amount were different greatly, which were 5.86 and 40.23% for hot water extraction, 9.4 and 52.62% for microware-assist extraction, 10.26 and 53.13% for complex-enzyme-hydrolysis extraction, respectively. Results indicated that the complex-enzyme-hydrolysis-assist extraction was the optimal approach used for extracting polysaccharide from Clitocybe maxima stipe. It showed with the advantages in high efficiency, energy and running time saving.
Keywords:
Clitocybe maxima, extraction methods, mushroom stipe, polysaccharide,
Competing interests
The authors have no competing interests.
Open Access Policy
This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made.
Copyright
The authors have no competing interests.
|
|
|
ISSN (Online): 2042-4876
ISSN (Print): 2042-4868 |
|
Information |
|
|
|
Sales & Services |
|
|
|