Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
34800 Process Biochemistry 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The collagen in Amur sturgeon cartilage was isolated by salt, acid and pepsin.•The collagen appeared to be dense sheet-like film linked by filaments under SEM.•The thermal stability of collagen was high assessed by CD and DSC.•The molecular species was mainly type I and II shown by SDS-PAGE.•The considerable differences in secondary structure were found from FTIR.

The collagen in Amur sturgeon cartilage was isolated using sodium chloride (salt-solubilized collagen, SSC, 2.18%), followed by acetic acid (acid-solubilized collagen, ASC, 27.04%) and then pepsin (pepsin-solubilized collagen, PSC, 55.92%). These collagens appeared to be dense sheet-like film linked by random-coiled filaments under SEM. The denaturation and melting temperatures of PSC (35.71 and 123.90 °C) were significantly higher than SSC (32.64 and 114.51 °C) and ASC (32.98 and 120.72 °C) assessed by circular dichroism and differential scanning calorimetry, which could be attributed to its high imino acid content (22.57%) and degree of hydroxylation (47.29%). Electrophoresis pattern showed that the SSC and ASC were type I collagen, while PSC was predominantly type II collagen along with other minor types. Infrared spectra confirmed their triple helical structure, and indicated more hydrogen bonding in ASC and more intermolecular crosslinks in PSC. These results provide some basis for their large-scale production and further application as alternatives to mammalian collagen.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Bioengineering
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