Prepared at the 53rd JECFA (1999) and published in FNP Add 7 (1999), superseding specifications prepared at the 51st JECFA (1998), published in FNP 52 Add 6 (1998). ADI "not specified" established at the 51st JECFA in 1998. |
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SOURCES |
Produced extracellularly by submerged fermentation of Bacillus subtilis, which through recombinant DNA techniques contains the gene for |
ACTIVE PRINCIPLES |
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SYSTEMATIC NAMES AND NUMBERS |
(S)-2-Hydroxy-2-methyl-oxobutanoate carboxylase (EC 4.1.1.5) |
REACTIONS CATALYSED |
Decarboxylation of |
DESCRIPTION |
Brown liquid containing the active enzyme; Total Organic Solids approx. 2% |
FUNCTIONAL USES |
Enzyme preparation |
GENERAL SPECIFICATIONS |
Must conform to the General Specifications for Enzyme Preparations Used in Food Processing (FNP 52 & Addendum 6) |
CHARACTERISTICS |
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IDENTIFICATION |
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The sample shows |
TESTS |
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Principle Apparatus 1. Spectrophotometer or equivalent capable of measuring optical density (absorbance) at 522 nm 2. Water bath, held at 30�1�, containing test tube rack 3. Volumetric glassware Reagents 1. MES buffer, 0.05M (pH = 6.0). Dissolve 9.76 g of MES (2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulphonic acid) in approximately 900 ml of deionised water. Adjust pH to 6.0�0.5 with 1 N NaOH. Transfer to a 1-litre volumetric flask and make to volume with deionised water. This solution may be kept for two weeks at room temperature. 2. Brij 35 solution, 15% w/v: Dissolve 15.0 g of Brij 35 (polyoxyethylene lauryl ether, Atlas Chemie, BDH, or equivalent) in approximately 70 ml of deionised water, heating to 60� to aid dissolution. After cooling, transfer to a 100-ml volumetric flask and make to volume with deionised water. This solution should be stored in a refrigerator, and can be kept for up to two months. 3. MES/Brij 35/NaCl solution. Dissolve 48.8 g of MES and 175.32 g of NaCl (AR grade) in approximately 4.5 litres of deionised water. Add 17 ml of 15% Brij 35 solution (see 2. above). Adjust pH to 6.0�0.5 with 1 N NaOH. Transfer to a 5-litre volumetric flask and make to volume with deionised water. This solution may be kept for two weeks at room temperature. 4. 5. Naphthol/Creatine colour reagent: Dissolve 5.00 g of 1-naphthol and 0.50 g of creatine in 1 N NaOH, make to volume with 1 N NaOH in a 500-ml volumetric flask. This colour reagent should be made fresh just before use and shielded from light as much as possible. 6. Acetoin stock solution, 1000 mg/l: Dissolve 0.100 g of acetoin (3-hydroxy-2-butanone) in deionised water in a 100-ml volumetric flask. Make to volume with deionised water. 7. Acetoin standards: Dilute 0, 1.0, 2.0, 4.0, 6.0, and 8.0 ml of stock acetoin solution (see 6. above) to volume with deionised water in 100 ml volumetric flasks to give standard solutions of 0, 10, 20, 40, 60, and 80 mg/l of acetoin. These solutions may be kept for two weeks stored in a refrigerator. 8. Enzyme solutions: Test samples of the enzyme are diluted with MES/Brij 35/NaCl solution (see 3. above). The exact dilution will need to be determined by experience and experimentation to give an enzyme concentration, which produces a result within the range of the acetoin standards (see 7. above) under the conditions of the test. Procedure Preparation of standard curve: Prepare a standard curve by treating the acetoin standards (7.) in the following manner: Pipette 400 Determination of enzyme activity Warm the enzyme solutions (see 8. above), MES buffer (see 1. above), and the substrate (see 4. above) in a water bath at 30�1� for approximately 10 min. Four solutions must be prepared for each analysis: Enzyme blank (B1). Pipette 200 Sample value (H1). Pipette 200 Buffer blank (B2). Pipette 200 Buffer value (H2). Pipette 200 For each enzyme determination the test tubes, are prepared in the order: B1, H1, B2, H2. Exactly 20 min after mixing of each of solutions B1, H1, B2, and H2, remove from water bath, add 4.6 ml of colour reagent (5.), mix and leave at room temperature for exactly 40 min. At the end of this 40 min period measure the absorbance of the solutions at 522 nm on a spectrophotometer or equivalent, previously adjusted so that the 0 mg/l acetoin standard gives an absorbance reading of zero. Calculation The activity of the enzyme is defined in terms of activity units where: One Plot optical density values at 522 nm for the acetoin standards against acetoin concentration (in mg acetoin/L) of the standard and generate a standard curve. Use the standard curve to convert the optical density measurements for solutions H1, B1, H2, and B2 to mg acetoin/L. Activity of enzyme (in {([H1] - [B1]) - ([H2] - [B2])} x 0.0011351 x F where: [H1], [B1], [H2], [B2] = the concentrations of acetoin in the respective solutions (mg/l) F = the final volume of enzyme solution, after dilutions (ml) W = weight of enzyme in volume F (g) The factor 0.0011351 contains: the conversion from mg acetoin/L to mmol acetoin/min the conversion for the actual volumes of substrate and enzyme solution used in the analysis. |