Effective Ethyl Carbamate Prevention in Red Wines by Treatment with Immobilized Acid Urease.

acid urease enzyme deactivation immobilized enzyme red wine stirred tank reactor

Journal

Foods (Basel, Switzerland)
ISSN: 2304-8158
Titre abrégé: Foods
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 101670569

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
06 Aug 2024
Historique:
received: 12 07 2024
revised: 26 07 2024
accepted: 31 07 2024
medline: 31 8 2024
pubmed: 31 8 2024
entrez: 29 8 2024
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Climate change poses several challenges in the wine industry, including increasing risks related to chemical food contaminants such as biogenic amines and ethyl carbamate (EC). In this work, we focused on urea removal in red wines by immobilized acid urease aiming at limiting EC formation during wine storage. By considering separable kinetics of catalyst deactivation and urea hydrolysis, it was possible to model the time course of urea removal in repeated uses in stirred batch reactors. Treatments based on immobilized urease of red wine enriched with 30 mg/L of urea allowed the reduction in the contaminant concentration to <5 mg/L. After 28.5 h of treatment, the observed urea level was reduced to about 0.5 mg/L, corresponding to a decrease in the potential ethyl carbamate (PEC) from 1662 μg/L to 93 μg/L, below the level of the non-enriched wine (187 μg/L). As a comparison, when treating the same wine with the free enzyme at maximum doses allowed by the EU law, urea and PEC levels decreased to only 12 mg/L and 415 μg/L respectively, after 600 h of treatment. These results show that, for red wines, urease immobilization is an effective strategy for urea removal and, thus, effective reduction in ethyl carbamate as a process contaminant. This study provides the scientific background for the future scaling-up of the process at an industrial level.

Identifiants

pubmed: 39200403
pii: foods13162476
doi: 10.3390/foods13162476
pii:
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Auteurs

Elisa Tavilli (E)

Department for Innovation in Biological, Agro-Food and Forest Systems, University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy.

Marco Esti (M)

Department of Agriculture and Forest Sciences, University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy.

Marcello Fidaleo (M)

Department for Innovation in Biological, Agro-Food and Forest Systems, University of Tuscia, 01100 Viterbo, Italy.

Classifications MeSH