Pectinase Experiments and Lesson Plans
Pectinase
Pectinase is a general term for enzymes that break down pectin, a polysaccharide substrate that is found in the cell walls of plants.
One of the most studied and widely used commercial pectinases is
polygalacturonase. It is useful because pectin is the jelly-like matrix
which helps cement plant cells together and in which other cell wall
components, such as cellulose fibrils, are embedded. Therefore
pectinase enzymes are commonly used in processes involving the
degradation of plant materials, such as speeding up the extraction of fruit juice from fruit, including apples and sapota. Pectinases have also been used in wine production since the 1960s. They can be extracted from fungi such as Aspergillus niger.
The fungus produces these enzymes to break down the middle lamella in
plants so that it can extract nutrients from the plant tissues and
insert fungal hyphae.
If pectinase is boiled it is denatured (distorted) making it harder to
connect with the pectin at the active site, and produce as much juice.
Pectinases are also used for retting. Addition of chelating agents
or pretreatment of the plant material with acid enhance the effect of
the enzyme.
Optimum environment
As they are enzymes, pectinases have an optimum temperature and pH
at which they are most active. For example, a commercial pectinase
might typically be activated at 45 to 55 °C and work well at a pH of
4.0 to 5. Pectinases are useful in fruit juice industries... Enzymes
are biological catalysyts that speed up chemical reactions by lowering
their activation energy.
External links
- Pectinase Database website
- Gives complete information of pectinase enzymes and their structures,
classifications, specific activities, literature, drug design, list of
industries, etc. [1]
References
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia Encyclopedia article "Pectinase"
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