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An optimal designed experiment for the alkaline hydrolysis of feather keratin.

Małgorzata DąbrowskaAgata SommerIzabela SinkiewiczAntoni TaraszkiewiczHanna Staroszczyk
Published in: Environmental science and pollution research international (2021)
Feathers, burdensome waste from the poultry industry, can be a cheap source of keratin, a protein with excellent physicochemical, biological, and mechanical properties. Acid and alkaline hydrolyses are usually adopted for isolation of keratin from its natural resources. This study aimed at assessing the statistically significant effect of input variables in the alkaline hydrolysis of keratin from chicken feathers on the process yield and on the molecular weight of peptides obtained. The effect of the volume ratio of 1M NaOH to the feathers' mass, the hydrolysis time, and the shaking speed of the reaction mixture on the process yield were analyzed. The use of statistical analysis at the design step of experiment allowed reducing the trial number from 27 to 9. Among the input variables analyzed, only the volume ratio of 1M NaOH to the feathers' mass had a significant effect on the process yield, while none of them significantly affected the molecular weight of the peptides obtained. All hydrolysates were dominated by two peptides' fractions, with molecular weights of ca. 130 and 250 kDa, and mixture of many peptides of weight close to 10 kDa and smaller. Alkaline hydrolysis of feather keratin yielded protein hydrolysates soluble over a wide pH range.
Keyphrases
  • anaerobic digestion
  • amino acid
  • sewage sludge
  • municipal solid waste
  • protein protein
  • heat shock protein
  • body mass index
  • study protocol
  • physical activity
  • binding protein
  • small molecule
  • phase ii