Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted Precipitation

Biorefining of green biomass to produce proteins for feed and food provides an important challenge in relation to development of a future sustainable and climate-neutral agriculture. In order to make it a viable value chain, all parts of the process need to be optimized. This includes careful select...

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Main Authors: Rasmus la Cour, Jan K. Schjoerring, Henning Jørgensen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-12-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsufs.2019.00112/full
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spelling doaj-bfc5a1cb874549e58aba085223f995a62020-11-25T02:52:09ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems2571-581X2019-12-01310.3389/fsufs.2019.00112503165Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted PrecipitationRasmus la CourJan K. SchjoerringHenning JørgensenBiorefining of green biomass to produce proteins for feed and food provides an important challenge in relation to development of a future sustainable and climate-neutral agriculture. In order to make it a viable value chain, all parts of the process need to be optimized. This includes careful selection of the source of biomass, the procedure used for protein extraction as well as the separation and recovery of proteins from the press juice. We here focus on recovery of proteins from juice made from screw press fractionation of four green biomasses, viz. ryegrass, red clover, ryegrass-white clover mixture and spinach. Separating out protein from the juice is a key step and several different methods have routinely been applied. We demonstrate that lignosulfonates aid in the precipitation of proteins in the juice. The optimal loading of lignosulfonate was 0.6–0.7 g per g crude protein in the juice. For ryegrass and red clover juice, this loading resulted in 10–25% increase in precipitated protein compared to the classical precipitation by heat treatment or acidification. For spinach, up to 60% increase in protein recovery was obtained by lignosulfonate addition. We conclude that lignosulfonate-assisted precipitation holds potential for improving the protein yield in biorefining of green biomass.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsufs.2019.00112/fullgreen juiceprotein feedflocculentgreen biomassgrassclover
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rasmus la Cour
Jan K. Schjoerring
Henning Jørgensen
spellingShingle Rasmus la Cour
Jan K. Schjoerring
Henning Jørgensen
Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted Precipitation
Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
green juice
protein feed
flocculent
green biomass
grass
clover
author_facet Rasmus la Cour
Jan K. Schjoerring
Henning Jørgensen
author_sort Rasmus la Cour
title Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted Precipitation
title_short Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted Precipitation
title_full Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted Precipitation
title_fullStr Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted Precipitation
title_full_unstemmed Enhancing Protein Recovery in Green Biorefineries by Lignosulfonate-Assisted Precipitation
title_sort enhancing protein recovery in green biorefineries by lignosulfonate-assisted precipitation
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sustainable Food Systems
issn 2571-581X
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Biorefining of green biomass to produce proteins for feed and food provides an important challenge in relation to development of a future sustainable and climate-neutral agriculture. In order to make it a viable value chain, all parts of the process need to be optimized. This includes careful selection of the source of biomass, the procedure used for protein extraction as well as the separation and recovery of proteins from the press juice. We here focus on recovery of proteins from juice made from screw press fractionation of four green biomasses, viz. ryegrass, red clover, ryegrass-white clover mixture and spinach. Separating out protein from the juice is a key step and several different methods have routinely been applied. We demonstrate that lignosulfonates aid in the precipitation of proteins in the juice. The optimal loading of lignosulfonate was 0.6–0.7 g per g crude protein in the juice. For ryegrass and red clover juice, this loading resulted in 10–25% increase in precipitated protein compared to the classical precipitation by heat treatment or acidification. For spinach, up to 60% increase in protein recovery was obtained by lignosulfonate addition. We conclude that lignosulfonate-assisted precipitation holds potential for improving the protein yield in biorefining of green biomass.
topic green juice
protein feed
flocculent
green biomass
grass
clover
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fsufs.2019.00112/full
work_keys_str_mv AT rasmuslacour enhancingproteinrecoveryingreenbiorefineriesbylignosulfonateassistedprecipitation
AT jankschjoerring enhancingproteinrecoveryingreenbiorefineriesbylignosulfonateassistedprecipitation
AT henningjørgensen enhancingproteinrecoveryingreenbiorefineriesbylignosulfonateassistedprecipitation
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