Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology

Many sugars are involved in the preservation of living organisms. Under thermal or hydric stress conditions, spores, yeasts, and microscopic animals accumulate trehalose, whereas pollen, plant seeds, and resurrection plants synthesize sucrose and oligosaccharides such as raffinose and stachyose. The...

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Main Author: del Buera, M.P.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera
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spelling ftunibueairesbd:todo:paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera 2023-10-29T02:30:57+01:00 Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology del Buera, M.P. https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera unknown http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar Freeze Avoidance Recalcitrant Seed Subzero Temperature Supercooling Point Thermal Hysteresis SER ftunibueairesbd https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera 2023-10-05T01:17:19Z Many sugars are involved in the preservation of living organisms. Under thermal or hydric stress conditions, spores, yeasts, and microscopic animals accumulate trehalose, whereas pollen, plant seeds, and resurrection plants synthesize sucrose and oligosaccharides such as raffinose and stachyose. These solutes also have proved to provide stabilization of dried or frozen labile biomolecules in vitro and have potential technological applications for the preservation of special food ingredients, which is obviously of enormous economical importance. The protectants promote the formation of amorphous, glassy systems, inhibit crystallization, and influence the kinetics of reactions responsible for deterioration during storage. There is evidence, however, that the maintenance of a glassy structure is not the only factor controlling biomolecule stability. Anhydrobiotic engineering aims to confer desiccation tolerance on otherwise sensitive living organisms by adopting the strategies of anhydrobiosis, and a large number of genes with a potential role in drought tolerance have been described. Other nature-based methods to protect biomolecules in frozen environments are the manipulation of ice-nucleating agents (INAs) (present in several microorganisms and lichen species) and antifreeze components (characteristic of some Antarctic fish). The former catalyze ice formation at relative warm subfreezing temperatures, and antifreeze polymers act by surface interactions. Cryo and dehydropreservation of biomolecules, which is of technological value, is frequently developed on an empirical basis. In this chapter, how the physical and chemical mechanisms by which anhydrobiotic organisms can tolerate extreme conditions may allow establishing stabilization protocols on a scientific basis is shown. © 2010, Springer New York. Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
institution Open Polar
collection Biblioteca Digital FCEN-UBA (Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales, Universidad de Buenos Aires)
op_collection_id ftunibueairesbd
language unknown
topic Freeze Avoidance
Recalcitrant Seed
Subzero Temperature
Supercooling Point
Thermal Hysteresis
spellingShingle Freeze Avoidance
Recalcitrant Seed
Subzero Temperature
Supercooling Point
Thermal Hysteresis
del Buera, M.P.
Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology
topic_facet Freeze Avoidance
Recalcitrant Seed
Subzero Temperature
Supercooling Point
Thermal Hysteresis
description Many sugars are involved in the preservation of living organisms. Under thermal or hydric stress conditions, spores, yeasts, and microscopic animals accumulate trehalose, whereas pollen, plant seeds, and resurrection plants synthesize sucrose and oligosaccharides such as raffinose and stachyose. These solutes also have proved to provide stabilization of dried or frozen labile biomolecules in vitro and have potential technological applications for the preservation of special food ingredients, which is obviously of enormous economical importance. The protectants promote the formation of amorphous, glassy systems, inhibit crystallization, and influence the kinetics of reactions responsible for deterioration during storage. There is evidence, however, that the maintenance of a glassy structure is not the only factor controlling biomolecule stability. Anhydrobiotic engineering aims to confer desiccation tolerance on otherwise sensitive living organisms by adopting the strategies of anhydrobiosis, and a large number of genes with a potential role in drought tolerance have been described. Other nature-based methods to protect biomolecules in frozen environments are the manipulation of ice-nucleating agents (INAs) (present in several microorganisms and lichen species) and antifreeze components (characteristic of some Antarctic fish). The former catalyze ice formation at relative warm subfreezing temperatures, and antifreeze polymers act by surface interactions. Cryo and dehydropreservation of biomolecules, which is of technological value, is frequently developed on an empirical basis. In this chapter, how the physical and chemical mechanisms by which anhydrobiotic organisms can tolerate extreme conditions may allow establishing stabilization protocols on a scientific basis is shown. © 2010, Springer New York.
format Other/Unknown Material
author del Buera, M.P.
author_facet del Buera, M.P.
author_sort del Buera, M.P.
title Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology
title_short Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology
title_full Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology
title_fullStr Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology
title_full_unstemmed Responses of Living Organisms to Freezing and Drying: Potential Applications in Food Technology
title_sort responses of living organisms to freezing and drying: potential applications in food technology
url https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera
op_rights info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar
op_doi https://doi.org/20.500.12110/paper_15710297_v_n_p553_delBuera
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