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Contents
Nonfattening Food AdditivesFrom
Sugar?

An electrophoresis gel helps biochemist Jeffrey Ahlgren (left) and geneticist
Timothy Leathers study the production of alternan, which is made by bacterial
fermentation.
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Many consumers probably don't know that a gum exuded from an African tree
species is a key ingredient in their food. Gum arabic from the Acacia tree is
used as a thickener and stabilizer in a variety of products, such as
citrus-based soft drinks, medicine capsules, and cosmetics.
Because gum arabic prices often fluctuate, food processors want a more
reliable domestic substituteand they may soon have it, thanks to
Agricultural Research Service scientists.
The U.S. domestic beet and cane sugar industries, armed with a powerful new
strain of a microbe developed by ARS researchers, may someday produce a product
called alternan. This alternative to gum arabic could, as a nonfattening food
ingredient alone, eclipse the present gum arabic market. The United States buys
thousands of tons of gum arabic annually from the Sudan and other countries at
volatile prices that are sometimes higher than $5 per pound.
As an emulsifier, gum arabic helps water and food oils mix and stay mixed.
Food processors use it in small amounts to make icings stick to cakes, prevent
syrups from crystallizing, and maintain a foamy head on a glass of
beerall without changing flavor.
Some gum arabic is used as a bulking agent or filler to provide a desired
texture in cosmetics and in industrial products like ink and adhesives.
"We've recently developed ways to produce 100-liter batches of alternan
that can be tested as bulking agents in a variety of applications," says
Gregory L. Côté. He is an ARS chemist at the National Center for
Agricultural Utilization Research (NCAUR) in Peoria, Illinois.
The next goal: Find a way to make alternan that consistently emulsifies at
least as well as gum arabic. Already, some forms of alternan show great promise
as emulsifiers.
The ARS scientists have patented three alternan-related inventions in the
past 2 years. One defines methods for rapidly identifying microorganisms that
produce large amounts of desired versions of alternan.
"When the gum arabic substitute is commercialized, we expect its
production cost will be similar to that of dextran, which currently wholesales
for about $3 per pound," says Timothy D. Leathers, an NCAUR geneticist.

Chemist Greg Côté inspects improved strains of Leuconostoc
mesenteroides, the bacterium that produces alternan.
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Both carbohydrate polymers, alternan and dextran have much in common. In the
early 1950s, ARS researchers developed an efficient process for making dextran
that was quickly commercialized. Dextran was used as a blood extender to save
uncounted American lives during U.S. involvement in the Korean conflict. The
extender is still used today.
Alternan is made by an enzyme called alternansucrase produced by the
Leuconostoc mesenteroides bacterium. To recast sugar into alternan,
Côté, Leathers, and their coworkers use this enzyme to break down
sugar and reassemble the fragmentsglucose unitsinto the polymer
alternan. The pattern of sugar linkages distinguishes alternan from dextran,
its chemical and biological cousin.
Biochemist Jeffrey A. Ahlgren has developed several physical and biochemical
ways to examine alternan. Its various forms and sizes affect its potential
usefulness in different applications."
One form produced by a novel patented enzyme is a molecule composed of four
glucose units in circular structure," says Ahlgren. "The compound
looks interesting, but we don't yet know what use might be made of it."
Join Us As Partners?
All the recent ARS inventions on alternan are available for licensing.
Besides finding a way to quickly identify microbes whose enzymes prodigiously
produce alternan, the scientists have identified improved strains of L.
mesenteroides. And they have identified bacteria and enzymes that break
down alternan.
"Presently we're trying to develop new versions of alternan that will
include small amounts of proteins," says Côté. Proteins are
believed to give gum arabic much of its emulsifying capacity.
An industrial partner in the research could help ARS scientists determine
processing conditions that could ensure that an alternan-protein compound is
consistently as good an emulsifier as gum arabic. A cooperative research and
development agreement might entail temporary use of a company's scaled-up
research equipment in a recently renovated pilot plant at NCAUR.
Joint research could also determine the potential of an alternan-derived
product for use as a probiotic. A probiotic is a nutrient that promotes growth
of beneficial, rather than harmful, microbes in an animal's gut.
Côté says alternan's first use in foods may be in the form of
broken fragments that could serve as bulking agents. As food companies use
artificial or alternative sweeteners, they typically use bulking agents to make
up for the loss of product volume. Bulking agents also help powdered food
products such as cake mixes flow smoothly as they are processed.
The major coproduct of alternan synthesis is fructose. Consequently, when
alternan becomes commercialized, the beet and cane sugar industries may begin
marketing high-fructose syrup to sweeten profits.
The ethanol industry could also benefit from commercialization of alternan.
Leathers has found that an abundant coproduct of ethanolcorn condensed
distillers' solubles, or CCDSworks as well as much more costly materials
as a nutrient for L. mesenteroides. Now, CCDS, which sells at about 2
cents per pound, is put in animal feeds. If CCDS becomes more valuable as it's
put to more use, it could enhance ethanol's competitiveness with petroleum,
while expanding markets for corn products.
From an L. mesenteroides strain, the researchers hope to clone the
gene responsible for producing alternan and to genetically engineer another
microorganism to produce greater quantities of the enzyme. A longer term goal
is to genetically transform certain plants to efficiently produce large
quantities of alternan.By Ben
Hardin, Agricultural Research Service Information Staff.
This research is part of New Uses, Quality, and Marketability of Plant
and Animal Products, an ARS National Program described on the World Wide Web at
http://www.nps.ars.usda.gov/programs/cppvs.htm.
Gregory L.
Côté, Timothy D.
Leathers, and Jeffrey A.
Ahlgren are in the Biopolymer Research Unit,
National Center for Agricultural
Utilization Research, 1815 N. University St., Peoria, IL 61604; phone (309)
681-6591, fax (309) 681-6689.
"Nonfattening Food AdditivesFrom Sugar?" was
published in the September 1999
issue of Agricultural Research magazine.
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