Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6451767 Food and Bioproducts Processing 2016 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The pressurization modes affected the enzymes in litchi juice differently.•Maximum enzymes inactivation achieved during severest cyclic pressure application.•Biphasic model fit best for isobaric inactivation of PPO and POD in litchi juice.•Inactivation kinetics showed POD to be more baroresistant than PPO in litchi juice.•Cyclic HPP most effective for litchi enzymes inactivation than pulsed and static.

Effects of three pressurization modes, namely pulsed pressurization (PP), static pressurization (SP) and cyclic pressurization (CP), were studied on enzymes polyphenol oxidase (PPO) and peroxidase (POD) in litchi juice. Process parameters considered were pressure (300-600 MPa), number of pressure pulses or cycles (1-3) and isobaric pressure-hold time (1 s to 45 min). PP resulted in increased activity of both the enzymes, and its effect was more pronounced on POD than PPO. Effect of SP on enzymes was assumed as a two-stage inactivation: initial impact of pressurization-depressurization step calculated as pulse effect (PE), and effect of isobaric stage described using various kinetic models, among which the biphasic first-order reaction model fitted best. Further, an empirical model was proposed to explain the combined effect of pressurization-depressurization and isobaric phases on the enzymes inactivation as a function of pressure and hold-time during SP of litchi juice. During CP, the effect of number of cycles was found to be dissimilar on both the enzymes in litchi juice, and it was relatively more effective than SP for their inactivation. Within the studied domain of process parameters, the baroresistance of POD was found to be more than PPO in litchi juice, irrespective of the pressurization mode.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Bioengineering
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