Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1189291 Food Chemistry 2008 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Cooke colorimetric assay of cassava linamarase activity is temperature- and time-inflexible, making “real time” monitoring of linamarase activity in remote cassava-processing sites practically impossible. A modified incubation procedure is described, in which the 30 °C linamarase incubation step is terminated through acidification, yielding a stable cyanohydrin solution. Using partially purified linamarase as a “standard extract”, the solution – held for up to 21 days at ambient/refrigeration temperatures before colorimetry – showed reductions of up to 21% compared with the standard Cooke assay. In a separate trial, a strong linear relationship (r2 > 0.95) was observed between recorded linamarase activity values and incubation temperature in the 25–40 °C range, indicating that incubation may take place in remote processing sites without a water bath, and resulting data may reliably be adjusted in keeping with the standard 30 °C incubation assay. The novel procedure thus appears to offer a satisfactory “field-friendly” means of assaying linamarase activity.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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