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Título
Entrapment of Glucose Oxidase and Catalase in Silica–Calcium–Alginate Hydrogel Reduces the Release of Gluconic Acid in Must
Autor
Año del Documento
2023
Editorial
MDPI
Descripción
Producción Científica
Documento Fuente
Gels 2023, 9, 622
Resumen
Glucose oxidase (GOX) and catalase (CAT) were co-immobilized in silica–calcium–alginate
hydrogels to degrade must glucose. The effect of the enzyme dose (1.2–2.4 U/mL), the initial must
pH (3.6–4.0), and the incubation temperature (10–20 _C) on the glucose consumption, gluconic
acid concentration, pH, and color intensity of Verdejo must was studied by using a Box–Behnken
experimental design and comparing free and co-immobilized enzymes. A reduction of up to 37.3 g/L
of glucose was observed in co-immobilized enzyme-treated must, corresponding to a decrease in its
potential alcohol strength of 2.0% vol. (v/v), while achieving a slight decrease in its pH (between
0.28 and 0.60). This slight acidification was due to a significant reduction in the estimated gluconic
acid found in the must (up to 73.7%), likely due to its accumulation inside the capsules. Regarding
the operational stability of immobilized enzymes, a gradual reduction in glucose consumption was
observed over eight consecutive cycles. Finally, co-immobilized enzymes showed enhanced efficiency
over a reaction period of 48 h, with an 87.1% higher ratio of glucose consumed per enzyme dose
in the second 24 h period compared with free enzymes. These findings provide valuable insights
into the performance of GOX–CAT co-immobilized to produce reduced-alcohol wines, mitigating
excessive must acidification.
Palabras Clave
acidity; hybrid capsule; organic-inorganic gel; siliceous material; sol–gel network
ISSN
2310-2861
Revisión por pares
SI
Version del Editor
Idioma
eng
Tipo de versión
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Derechos
openAccess
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