Protein improvement of banana peel through sequential solid state fermentation using mixed-culture of and .

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1Biotechnology Engineering Department, Faculty of Engineering, Bioenvironmental Engineering Research Centre (BERC), International Islamic University Malaysia (IIUM), Jalan Gombak, P.O.Box 10, 50728 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Published: October 2018


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Article Abstract

Banana peel (BP) is a major waste produced by fruit processing industries. Pre-treatment of BP at different temperatures led to 40% reduction in saponin at 100 °C (from 9.5 to 5.7 mg/g). Sequential mixed culture of () and () gave highest protein enrichment (88.93 mg/g). There is 26% increase in protein synthesis (from 88.93 to 111.78 mg/g) after media screening. Inclusion of KHPO, FeSO·7HO, wheat flour and sucrose in the media contributed positively to protein synthesis, while elevated concentration of urea, peptone, KHPO, KCl, NHHPO and MgSO.7HO are required to reach optimum protein synthesis. Total soluble sugar (TSS), total reducing sugar (TRS) and total carbohydrate (CHO) consumption varied with respect to protein synthesis in all experimental runs. Optimum protein synthesis required 6 days and inclusion of 5% sucrose, 0.6% NHHPO, 0.4% KCl, and 0.5% MgSO·7HO as concentration media constituents to reach 140.95 mg/g protein synthesis equivalent to 300% increase over the raw banana peel protein content (35.0 mg/g).

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6141834PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13205-018-1435-4DOI Listing

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