Aquatic weeds as novel protein sources: Alkaline extraction of tannin-rich Azolla

Publication date

2019-12

Authors

Brouwer, PaulISNI 0000000443773097
Nierop, Klaas G.J.ISNI 0000000139519537
Huijgen, Wouter J.J.
Schluepmann, HenrietteISNI 0000000392878672

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

The aquatic weed Azolla is a potential protein crop due to its prolific growth and high protein content, supported entirely by nitrogen-fixing symbionts. Alkaline protein extraction at pH 8 followed by acid precipitation allowed recovery of 16–26% of the biomass nitrogen, while at pH 10.5 nitrogen recovery improved to 35–54%. This pH effect was typical of ferns of the family Salviniaceae, and may be explained by high concentrations of condensed tannins (CTs) in the biomass that precipitate protein at mild pH. Two approaches were tested to increase protein yield and reduce protein binding by CTs. Pre-extraction with aqueous acetone (70 v/v%) removed 76–85% of the CTs and subsequent alkaline extraction at pH 12.5 and 95 °C recovered 38% of the biomass nitrogen. Extraction with 1.5% of PEG as a CT-binding agent, also permitted to recover 38% of the nitrogen, under milder conditions of pH 8 and 45 °C.

Keywords

Alkaline extraction, Aquatic weeds, Azolla, Condensed tannins, Protein, Biotechnology, Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology

Citation

Brouwer, P, Nierop, K G J, Huijgen, W J J & Schluepmann, H 2019, 'Aquatic weeds as novel protein sources : Alkaline extraction of tannin-rich Azolla', Biotechnology Reports, vol. 24, e00368. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.btre.2019.e00368