Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment
Stronger interest in natural food colorants as alternatives to synthetic colorants has greatly aroused among the modern consumers due to food safety and health concerns. The reduced number of permitted synthetic food colorants from 80 to 16 compounds resulted from studies started in 1904 has attr...
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iium-129532013-08-28T03:09:44Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/12953/ Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment Kamarudin, Kamarul Rahim K., Robert Lewis, G. D. Greenwood, David R. Villas-Bôas, Silas Q Science (General) Stronger interest in natural food colorants as alternatives to synthetic colorants has greatly aroused among the modern consumers due to food safety and health concerns. The reduced number of permitted synthetic food colorants from 80 to 16 compounds resulted from studies started in 1904 has attracted manufacturers to focus more on production of natural food colorants from plants. However, since the production costs for plant-derived food colorants are comparatively ineffective and not competitive, the new focuses are to assess more potential food grade pigment-producing microbes and improve their production yields for large-scale industrial application. Accordingly, this study aims to find new and cheaper sources of natural food grade pigments from New Zealand environmental-isolated microbes. The screening of selected pigment-producing microbes from the School of Biological Sciences (SBS) culture collection to date indicates a number of potential natural pigments with various colour-shades successfully extracted using methanol. There are also a few water-soluble pigments excreted into the culture medium. Commercial saffron (Crocus sativus) crude extract was used as a standard water-soluble natural pigment to establish a High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) method for pigment separation and purification. Pigments from 60 different microbial strains have been extracted and their HPLC purification is being carried out in order to have their physical chemical properties assayed. 2008-11-18 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/12953/1/2008_NZMS_Kamarul_et_al.pdf Kamarudin, Kamarul Rahim and K., Robert and Lewis, G. D. and Greenwood, David R. and Villas-Bôas, Silas (2008) Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment. In: NZMS Conference 2008: Germs and Genomes in the Garden City, 18-21 November 2008, Central Lecture Block, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand. |
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topic |
Q Science (General) |
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Q Science (General) Kamarudin, Kamarul Rahim K., Robert Lewis, G. D. Greenwood, David R. Villas-Bôas, Silas Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment |
description |
Stronger interest in natural food colorants as alternatives to synthetic colorants has
greatly aroused among the modern consumers due to food safety and health concerns.
The reduced number of permitted synthetic food colorants from 80 to 16 compounds
resulted from studies started in 1904 has attracted manufacturers to focus more on
production of natural food colorants from plants. However, since the production costs
for plant-derived food colorants are comparatively ineffective and not competitive, the
new focuses are to assess more potential food grade pigment-producing microbes and
improve their production yields for large-scale industrial application. Accordingly, this
study aims to find new and cheaper sources of natural food grade pigments from New
Zealand environmental-isolated microbes. The screening of selected pigment-producing
microbes from the School of Biological Sciences (SBS) culture collection to date
indicates a number of potential natural pigments with various colour-shades
successfully extracted using methanol. There are also a few water-soluble pigments
excreted into the culture medium. Commercial saffron (Crocus sativus) crude extract
was used as a standard water-soluble natural pigment to establish a High Performance
Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) method for pigment separation and purification.
Pigments from 60 different microbial strains have been extracted and their HPLC
purification is being carried out in order to have their physical chemical properties
assayed. |
format |
Conference or Workshop Item |
author |
Kamarudin, Kamarul Rahim K., Robert Lewis, G. D. Greenwood, David R. Villas-Bôas, Silas |
author_facet |
Kamarudin, Kamarul Rahim K., Robert Lewis, G. D. Greenwood, David R. Villas-Bôas, Silas |
author_sort |
Kamarudin, Kamarul Rahim |
title |
Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment |
title_short |
Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment |
title_full |
Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment |
title_fullStr |
Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment |
title_full_unstemmed |
Screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from New Zealand environment |
title_sort |
screening of potential food grade pigment-producing microbes from new zealand environment |
publishDate |
2008 |
url |
http://irep.iium.edu.my/12953/ http://irep.iium.edu.my/12953/1/2008_NZMS_Kamarul_et_al.pdf |
first_indexed |
2023-09-18T20:22:05Z |
last_indexed |
2023-09-18T20:22:05Z |
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1777408173917863936 |