Detection and quantification of lysozyme in champagne wines.

J Agric Food Chem

Laboratoire d'Oenologie, URVVC, UPRES EA 2069, Faculté des Sciences, Université de Reims, France.

Published: August 2000

We describe here techniques to detect and quantify lysozyme in Pinot noir and Chardonnay Champagne wines. Using a dot-blot technique, lysozyme antibodies were able to recognize their antigens even when the concentration of lysozyme in wine was 75 mg/L. SDS-PAGE was the second technique used. After Coomassie Brilliant Blue (CBB) staining or antibody immunostaining was performed, the wine originating from the lysozyme-treated must gave only one band corresponding to the lysozyme. It is then possible to precisely determine the concentration of lysozyme in a must or a wine by densitometric measurement of this band. The control wine gave no band with the CBB staining, such as with the immunostaining. The quantification of lysozyme with HPLC is another useable technique because the lysozyme elution time is largely superior to that of all of the wine compounds. In wines, losses of lysozyme were higher when the enzyme was added at one time to the must (-34% for the Pinot noir and -37% for the Chardonnay) than when lysozyme is added in 2-fold both in the must and in the wine (around -26% for the two wines). The lowest diminution is observed when lysozyme was added to the wine only (-18%) in comparison to the addition to the must at 300 mg/L (-43%).

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf990848aDOI Listing

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