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Biocatalytic conversion of aloeresin A to aloesin. | LitMetric

Biocatalytic conversion of aloeresin A to aloesin.

J Ind Microbiol Biotechnol

Protein Technologies, CSIR Biosciences, P.O. Box 395, Pretoria, 0001, South Africa.

Published: July 2012

AI Article Synopsis

  • Aloe species, like Aloe ferox, produce leaf exudates used in traditional medicine, including aloesin, a compound that can lighten skin by inhibiting melanin synthesis.
  • Researchers aimed to improve the extraction process of aloesin by using enzymatic hydrolysis to convert aloeresin A into aloesin, screening over 70 enzymes for effectiveness.
  • The best results were obtained from a protease in Novozym 388, which, due to a contaminating enzyme, significantly increased aloesin concentrations in the aloe bitters extract, achieving nearly complete conversion of aloeresin A.

Article Abstract

Leaf exudates from Aloe species, such as the Southern African Aloe ferox, are used in traditional medicines for both humans and livestock. This includes aloesin, a skin bleaching product that inhibits the synthesis of melanin. Aloesin, (a C-glycoside-5-methylchromone) can be released from aloeresin A, an ester of aloesin, through hydrolysis. The objective of the current study was to identify an enzymatic hydrolysis method for converting aloeresin A to aloesin, resulting in increased concentrations of aloesin in the aloe bitters extract. More than 70 commercially available hydrolytic enzymes were screened for the conversion of aloeresin A. An esterase (ESL001-02) from Diversa, a lipase (Novozym 388) and a protease (Aspergillus oryzae) preparation were identified during screening as being capable of providing conversion of pure aloeresin A, with the protease giving the best conversion (~100%). It was found that a contaminating enzyme in Novo 388 was responsible for the conversion of aloeresin A to aloesin. This contaminating enzyme, possibly a protease, was able to give almost complete conversion using crude aloe bitters extract, doubling the concentration of aloesin in aloe bitters extract via the hydrolysis of aloeresin A.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10295-012-1101-5DOI Listing

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