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Diastatic power and maltose value: a method for the measurement of amylolytic enzymes in malt

Lucie M. J. Charmier, Ciara McLoughlin, Barry V. McCleary

2021Journal of the Institute of Brewing15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A simple method for measurement of the amylolytic activity of malt has been developed and fully evaluated. The method, termed the Maltose Value (MV) is an extension of previously reported work. Here, the MV method has been studied in detail and all aspects of the assay (sample grinding and extraction, starch hydrolysis, maltose hydrolysis and determination as glucose) have been optimised. The method is highly correlated with other dextrinising power methods. The MV method involves extraction of malt in 0.5% sodium chloride at 30°C for 20 minutes followed by filtration; incubation of an aliquot of the undiluted filtrate with starch solution (pH 4.6) at 30°C for 15 min; termination of reaction with sodium hydroxide solution; dilution of sample in an appropriate buffer; hydrolysis of maltose with a specific α-glucosidase; glucose determination and activity calculation. Unlike all subsequent reducing sugar methods, the maltose value method measures a defined reaction product, maltose, with no requirement to use equations to relate analytical values back to Lintner units. The maltose value method is the first viable method in 130 years that could effectively replace the 1886 Lintner method. © 2021 The Authors. Journal of the Institute of Brewing published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The Institute of Brewing & Distilling.

Topics & Concepts

MaltoseChemistryStarchHydrolysisChromatographyBrewingSugarSodium hydroxideExtraction (chemistry)BiochemistryEnzymeOrganic chemistryFermentationEnzyme Production and CharacterizationBiofuel production and bioconversionEnzyme Catalysis and Immobilization
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