The invention relates to a hydrolysis of plant proteins to form plant protein hydrolysates. In particular, the invention relates to an apparatus and a use of the apparatus for the manufacture of the plant protein hydrolysates. The invention also relates to a method for the manufacture of the plant protein hydrolysates.
Protein hydrolysates such as amino acids and peptides have applications in food technology. The protein hydrolysates are used for providing taste active ingredients to food products.
Protein hydrolysates are manufactured by hydrolysis of a protein. Protein hydrolysates can therefore include amino acids and peptides which are obtained by the hydrolysis of the protein.
The use of enzymes for the hydrolysis of the protein is a known procedure. The enzymes are usually mixed with the protein to form the protein hydrolysates in a batch procedure. However, the use of enzymes in the batch procedure can be prohibitive as the enzymes cannot be collected from the mixture, isolated and reused. Furthermore, the cost of the enzymes can be up to 50% of the cost of total raw materials. Therefore, the batch procedure for the hydrolysis of proteins has its drawbacks.
Ultra filtration (UF) is a process of separating small molecules such as amino acids and peptides from protein hydrolysate mixtures using membranes. The basis for the separation is size exclusion of molecules such that particles such as amino acids and peptides are retained on the membrane, while other constituents of the mixture such as salt and water pass through the membrane. Therefore, U facilitates amino acid and peptide protein concentration. UF nevertheless has drawbacks and the effectiveness of UF is strongly dependent on operating parameters and hydrolysate characteristics. The operating parameters can be, for example, trans-membrane pressure, membrane cut-off, tangential fluid velocity and system hydrodynamics. The hydrolysate characteristics can be, for example, pH, viscosity, particle size, and salt concentration. That is to say that current UF technology requires the manipulation of a number of factors which is complicated and cumbersome to maintain in order to achieve efficient separation and isolation of the protein hydrolysates.
Plant proteins are partly water-insoluble. The structure of plant proteins is relatively large. The diffusion of plant proteins into an immobilization matrix such as a bed of immobilized enzymes has not been contemplated or considered. Consequently, the effectiveness of immobilized enzymes for plant protein hydrolysis is poor.
Nevertheless, the use of immobilized proteases for the manufacture of protein hydrolysates from peptides is known. However, due to a lack of effectiveness the feasibility of such systems is still hindered (see for example Walsh, M., K., Immobilized enzyme for food applications, in Novel enzyme technology for food applications, R. Rastall, Editor, 2007, CRC Press LLC: Boca Raton, p. 60-84).
An object of the present invention is therefore to provide an apparatus and method for the manufacture of plant protein hydrolysates that goes at least part way to overcoming one or more of the above disadvantages, or at least provides a useful alternative.
In a first aspect the invention relates to a membrane reactor for the manufacture of plant protein hydrolysates, the membrane reactor comprising:
a) a substrate vessel adapted to provide a plant protein substrate to an enzyme source,
b) a continuously stirred reactor comprising the enzyme source; and
c) an ultrafiltration module comprising a membrane with a molecular cut-off wherein the membrane is adapted to allow passage of the plant protein hydrolysate while retaining the enzyme.
In preferred embodiments of the invention, the membrane reactor further comprises:
d) a first circulation loop enabling a mixture of the plant protein substrate and enzyme source to be transferred from the continuously stirred reactor to the ultrafiltration module and at least some of the mixture to be returned to the continuously stirred reactor; and
e) a second circulation loop enabling the mixture received from the first circulation loop to be circulated through or over the membrane and at least some of the mixture to be returned to the first circulation loop.
In a second aspect the invention relates to a use of the membrane reactor in the manufacture of plant protein hydrolysates for food stuffs.
In another aspect the invention provides a method for the manufacture of plant protein hydrolysates for use in food, the method comprising:
a) providing a suspension of plant protein,
b) adding to the suspension of plant protein an enzyme to form a mixture such that plant protein hydrolysis occurs,
c) filtering the resulting mixture through an ultrafiltration module comprising a membrane with a molecular cut-off; and
d) collecting the filtrate comprising the plant protein hydrolysate for use as a food.
Preferably, step c) of the method comprises circulating the mixture between a continuously stirred reactor and an ultrafiltration module such that some of the mixture is returned from the ultrafiltration module to the continuously stirred reactor and some of the mixture is circulated through or over the membrane.
In a further aspect the invention provides a plant protein hydrolysate obtainable by the method of the invention, wherein the plant protein hydrolysate is a taste enhancing compound for use in foodstuffs.
In a first aspect the present invention relates to a membrane reactor for the hydrolysis of a plant protein to form plant protein hydrolysates. The membrane reactor combines advantages of enzyme immobilization (e.g. lower enzyme substrate ratio) and the enzyme batch system (e.g. good enzyme/substrate contact). The membrane reactor enables large scale hydrolysis of plant proteins to form plant protein hydrolysates.
The membrane reactor preferably comprises a double loop system. This system has two circulation loops. One loop operates at around atmospheric pressure and transfers a mixture of plant protein material and enzyme from a holding tank (or substrate vessel) to a second circulation loop. Most of the mixture passes to the second circulation loop, but some is circulated back to the holding tank in a continuous process. The mixture that passes to the second circulation loop is subjected to ultrafiltration. The second circulation loop operates under a pressure of 1 to 8 bar, preferably 6 bar, to force the mixture at high velocity (2 to 10 m/s) through or over the filtration membrane. The reason is to avoid the formation of a fouling layer of substrate on the membrane. The membrane has pores of suitable cut-off size (1-20 nm, preferably 5 nm) to enable the plant protein hydrolysate material of the invention to pass through the membrane (filtrate). Material that does not pass through the membrane (retentate) is recirculated in the second circulation loop.
The membrane reactor increases efficiency of plant protein hydrolysis. The efficiency is increased by re-usage of the enzyme's catalytic activity resulting in a better enzyme/plant protein ratio. Additionally, the removal of plant protein hydrolysate shifts the equilibrium of enzymatic action or microbial fermentation towards plant protein hydrolysate. Efficiency of plant protein hydrolysis is thus defined by the following three factors:
Therefore, process efficiency values of the batch process mean that an operating window for a semi-continuous membrane bioreactor system can be defined, from which the technological targets for the membrane reactor can be deduced.
The operating window as determined from
A schematic of an exemplary embodiment of the membrane reactor is shown in
An advantage of having separation of solid matter and liquid matter from the mixture from the CSTR prior to filtration is to avoid insoluble matter to foul and enter the membrane of the UF module. The separation of solid matter and liquid matter decreases the risk of fouling of the membrane and increases the output of plant protein hydrolysate. The separation of solid matter and liquid matter can be achieved by, for example, but not limited to, separation techniques such as centrifugation and metal edge filters as known in the art.
The membrane reactor can also include an electro dialysis system (not shown). The electro dialysis system operates by applying electrical potential difference through the membrane such that an electrical charge is passed over the membrane to cause diffusion of polar molecules such as amino acids through the membrane. The electro dialysis system enables a separation of the amino acids and the peptides from the plant protein hydrolysates.
According to an aspect of the invention the plant protein wheat gluten was mixed with water to obtain a suspension of plant protein of between 0.5 to 50% (w/w), preferably between 0.5% (w/w) to 22%, more preferably between 5 to 10% (w/w). It is observed that when the suspension of plant protein is between 0.5% (w/w) to 22% there is an improvement of pumping properties and a reduction of membrane fouling. In order to maintain stability of enzyme action the pH of the plant protein in water suspension is adjusted to pH 5 by the addition of acetic acid. Alternatively, to maintain stability of enzyme action the plant protein in water suspension is heated. Heating the plant protein in water suspension is preferred since the heating provides improved accessibility of the plant protein with the enzyme and enables a higher enzyme activity and microbial stability of the enzyme. The wheat gluten suspension is transferred to the continuously stirred reactor with a rate equal to a rate of formation of plant protein hydrolysate to ensure the continuous manufacture of plant protein hydrolysate. In the CSTR, the enzyme (or mixture of enzymes) 20-5000 nkat/L is present for hydrolysis of the plant protein to peptides and amino acids. The mixture entering the UF module is in cross-flow mode, circulated over a membrane (e.g. ceramic membrane) with a channel size that is large enough to avoid channel blockage by particles that are present in the mixture. A pore-size of the membrane of the UF module must be small enough to retain enzyme and plant proteins, but large enough to allow protein hydrolysates to pass through the membrane.
It is to be appreciated that following the manufacture of the plant protein hydrolysate, the plant protein hydrolysate can be dried.
The plant protein hydrolysates are useful for providing taste active ingredients to food products.
A ceramic membrane of the UF device with a 5 nanometre molecular cut-off pore size was tested for enzyme retention with plant protein. In various aspects of the invention the membrane of the UF device can have a molecular cut-off pore size of between 1 to 20 nanometres. The aim of the test was to assess a technical protease enzyme cocktail (Flavorzyme, [E] 264 nkat/L Leu-p-Na) passed though the membrane in the presence of plant protein (10% w/w wheat gluten). Enzyme retention by the membrane is important for the technical feasibility of the membrane bioreactor for plant protein hydrolysis. The results are shown in
Furthermore, the stability of glutaminase activity was followed under process conditions (57±1° C. and pH 5.0±0.2 in the presence of substrate) by hydrolysis of the chromogenic substrate L-γ-Glutamyl-p-Nitroanilide (GpNA). The results of this stability investigation are shown in
The enzyme activity of the protease enzyme Flavorzyme (available from Novozymes NS) was determined using the leucine para-nitroanilide method and wheat gluten substrate (see Deeslie, M.C.a.W.D., Soy Protein Hydrolysis in Membrane Reactors. JAOCS, 1983. 60(6): pp. 1112-1115). The initial activity was 264 nkat/L,
Laboratory tests with a membrane reactor using a 10 kDa filter and a wheat gluten substrate concentration of 0.5% (w/w) showed proof of principle of the membrane reactor for enzymatic wheat gluten hydrolysis. The product/substrate ratio of the membrane reactor was 51% since the amount of substrate used was 1 gram over 20 hours and the total product yield was 0.51 gram. The batch hydrolysis under the same conditions with the same absolute amount of enzyme (0.89 nkat/g), but a total reaction volume of 50 mL which correlates with a substrate amount of 0.25 gram resulted in a product/substrate ratio of 70% using a molecular weight cut-off (MWCO) of 10 kDa since the product yield was 0.18 gram. Therefore, according to the invention, the enzyme usage efficiency increased almost 3 times. The results are shown in
The plant protein of the invention can of course be derived from other sources of plant protein aside from whey. The sources of plant protein can include, but are not limited to, plant protein derived from soy, corn, potato, pea or cassava.
The enzymes of the invention can be a single enzyme or a mixture of enzymes. The enzyme can be enzyme is at least one of an endopeptidase, an exopeptidase a glutaminsae and an enzyme derived from Basidiomycetes.
Also at pilot plant scale technical feasibility was evaluated. A significant improvement of amino acid release over time was shown when applying the same size of membrane reactor and the same enzyme concentration as shown in
The amino acid profile of the plant protein hydrolysate is shown in
As shown in
The invention includes the state of the art science and technology for powder wetting, enzyme kinetic understanding (biotransformation), membrane bioreactor technology (Fractionation and Membrane Technology), sensory analysis, and understanding recent trends in consumer market trends research and product application.
The invention provides energy efficiency and operational simplicity, high transport selectivity, large operational flexibility and environment compatibility. The invention also provides means for enhanced molecular separations and chemical transformations overcoming existing limits of the traditional industrial processes.
The advantages of the invention demonstrate that the enzymes applied are still active at the end of the plant protein hydrolysis. In the batch process the enzymes need to be inactivated at the end of the protein hydrolysis. Since the enzymatic (also called bio-catalytic) function is catalytic it is logical that a more efficient use of enzyme can be obtained by retaining or recovering it during or after plant protein hydrolysis.
The invention enables the fractionation and concentration of plant protein hydrolysates according to size. An advantage of plant protein hydrolysates is the perception by the consumer especially in the case of the vegetarian consumer who would prefer not to consume animal derived protein hydrolysates. Furthermore, the plant protein hydrolysates are manufactured in a natural way.
As used in this specification, the words “comprises”, “comprising”, and similar words, are not to be interpreted in an exclusive or exhaustive sense. In other words, they are intended to mean “including, but not limited to”.
Further, any reference in this specification to prior art documents is not intended to be an admission that they are widely known or form part of the common general knowledge in the field.
The invention is further described with reference to the following examples. It will be appreciated that the invention as claimed is not intended to be limited in any way by these examples.
In this example the following process parameters of a double loop enzyme membrane system operated in semi-continuous mode (removal of 600 mL filtrate every 2 hours): Trans membrane pressure 3±0.5 bar, membrane velocity 4-6 m/s, reactor volume 2 L, Flavourzyme™: 1 g/L Wheat gluten 10 g/L, pH 5, T 50° C. The yield and enzyme stability in this experiment are shown in
in this example the following process parameters of a double loop enzyme membrane system operated in semi-continuous mode (removal of 600 mL filtrate every 2 hours): Trans membrane pressure 3±0.5 bar, membrane velocity 4-6 mils, Reactor volume 2 L, Flavourzyme™: 5 g/L wheat gluten 10 g/L, pH 5, T 40° C. The yield and enzyme stability in this experiment are shown in
In this example the following process parameters of a double loop enzyme membrane system operated in semi-continuous mode (removal of 600 mL filtrate every 2 hours): Trans membrane pressure 3±0.5 bar, membrane velocity 4-6 m/s, Reactor volume 2 L, Flavourzyme™: 5 g/L, wheat gluten 20 g/L, pH 7, T 50° C. The yield and enzyme stability in this experiment are shown in
In this example the following process parameters of a double loop enzyme membrane system operated in semi-continuous mode (removal of 600 mL filtrate every 2 hours): Trans membrane pressure 3±0.5 bar, membrane velocity 4-6 mils, reactor volume 2 L, Flavourzyme™: 5 g/L, wheat gluten 20 g/L, pH 5, T 30° C. The yield and enzyme stability in this experiment are shown in
In this example the following process parameters of a double loop enzyme membrane system operated in semi-continuous mode (removal of 600 mL filtrate every 2 hours): Trans membrane pressure 3±0.5 bar, membrane velocity 4-6 mils, Reactor volume 2 L, Flavourzyme™: 0.1 g/L, wheat gluten 20 g/L, pH 7, T 30° C. The yield and enzyme stability in this experiment are shown in
It is to be appreciated that although the invention has been described with reference to specific embodiments, variations and modifications may be made without departing from the scope of the invention as defined in the claims. Furthermore, where known equivalents exist to specific features, such equivalents are incorporated as if specifically referred to in this specification.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10196255.3 | Dec 2010 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2011/073635 | 12/21/2011 | WO | 00 | 6/18/2013 |