Investigation of biocatalytic production of lactosucrose and fructooligosaccharides using levansucrases and dairy by-products as starting materials.

Enzyme Microb Technol

Department of Food Science and Agricultural Chemistry, McGill University, 21111 Lakeshore, Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec H9X 3V9, Canada.

Published: September 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Selected levansucrases (LSs) were studied for their ability to convert lactose and sucrose into lactosucrose and fructooligosaccharides (FOSs) using dairy by-products like whey and milk permeate as lactose sources.
  • The research involved four types of LSs from different bacteria, all showing greater ability to catalyze transfructosylation reactions than to hydrolyze, except one strain that performed differently in specific conditions.
  • The study found that the V. natriegens LS2 strain produced the most lactosucrose, indicating that LS-catalyzed reactions can effectively leverage abundant biomass for valuable products like lactosucrose and FOSs.

Article Abstract

Selected levansucrases (LSs) were investigated for their ability to catalyze the transfructosylation of lactose/sucrose into lactosucrose and fructooligosaccharides (FOSs). Additionally, dairy by-products, including whey permeate (WP) and milk permeate (MP), were assessed for their effectiveness as lactose sources. LSs from Gluconobacter oxydans (LS1), Vibrio natriegens (LS2), Novosphingobium aromaticivorans (LS3), and Burkholderia graminis (LS4) were utilized in three transfructosylation reactions that combined sucrose with either lactose, WP, or MP. All LSs demonstrated a higher transfructosylation activity than hydrolytic one, except for V. natriegens LS2 in the presence of sucrose and MP/sucrose. Furthermore, the bioconversion efficiency of lactose/sucrose into lactosucrose and FOSs exhibited varying time courses and end-product profiles. Both the acceptor specificity of LS and the thermodynamic equilibrium of its reaction modulated the end-product profile. V. natriegens LS2 resulted in the highest lactosucrose production of 328 and 251 g/L with lactose/sucrose and WP/sucrose, respectively. Our results revealed the potential of LS-catalyzed transfructosylation for the biocatalytic production of both lactosucrose and FOSs from abundant biomasses.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.enzmictec.2023.110279DOI Listing

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