Abstract
It is hard to degrade untreated highly crystalline chitin. In this study, two solvents pretreatment chitin (acid swollen chitin (AC), super fine chitin (FC)) and microwave-heating method were used to enhance nonspecific enzymatic hydrolysis (lysozyme and pepsin), which obviously improved the enzymolysis rates by at least 1.31 times. Characterizations of chitin substrates (Mv, SEM, XRD) showed that calcium solvent pretreatment (obtained FC) was milder but effective than phosphoric acid pretreatment (obtained AC). The highest yield of chitin oligosaccharides (37.58 mg/g) were obtained after hydrolyzing AC under five-hour simultaneous microwave radiation by pepsin, among them, the content of N-acetylglucosamine was 13.76 mg/g. While, more chitin oligosaccharides with DP (degree of polymerization) 3–4 and lower DA (degree of acetylation) were obtained when using lysozyme than pepsin. Significantly, the conversion rate of chitin to oligosaccharides went best only when microwave and enzymes acting together (simultaneous strategy), which were at least 35.59% higher than separately pretreatment enzymes and substrates by microwave. The damages of microwave radiation on lysozyme and chitin substrates were revealed, and the operating principle of the whole enzyme reaction system heated by microwave was preliminatively explored.
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More From: International Journal of Biological Macromolecules
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