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Effect of Different Extraction Methods on Physicochemical Characteristics and Antioxidant Activity of C-Phycocyanin from Dry Biomass of Arthrospira platensis

Qian Chen, Shuhui Li, Hua Xiong, Qiang Zhao

2022Foods22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The effect of four different extraction methods on physicochemical characteristics and functionalities of chloro-phycocyanin (CP) was investigated. Swelling (S-CP), freezing and thawing (4FT-CP), ultrasonication with freezing and thawing (4FT+U-CP), and the high-pressure cell disruption (HPCD-CP) process affected CP differently, thus resulting in different levels of solubility, DPPH scavenging activity, ABTS scavenging activity, and reducing power. Among the four CPs, HPCD-CP had the highest CP content (15.3%), purity (1.66 ± 0.16), and ∆E value but the lowest ∆b value. The ζ potential of HPCD-CP (-38.8 mV) was the highest, but the average particle size of 4FT+U-CP (719.1 nm) was the highest. UV-Vis absorption spectra and fluorescence spectra illustrated that high-pressure cell disruption-assisted extraction had more profound impacts on the microenvironment of tetrapyrrole chromophores, the environment of aromatic amino acids, and the phycocyanobilin of CP. Furthermore, HPCD-CP and 4FT-CP showed higher solubility and antioxidant activities than S-CP, especially 4FT+U-CP. The results obtained in this study demonstrate that HPCD technology could obtain a food-grade C-phycocyanin product with higher CP concentration, purity, solubility, and antioxidant activity.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryABTSExtraction (chemistry)PhycocyaninAntioxidantSolubilityDPPHPhycocyanobilinScavengingAbsorption (acoustics)Food scienceNuclear chemistryChromatographyBiochemistryOrganic chemistryMaterials scienceBiologyCyanobacteriaGeneticsComposite materialBacteriaAlgal biology and biofuel productionMeat and Animal Product QualityPhysiological and biochemical adaptations