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Gold in Them Thar Hulls By
Doris Stanley December
18, 1997
From a corn kernel hull, Agricultural
Research Service scientists have discovered and applied for
patents on two new products: Amaizing oil, a corn fiber
oil that may lower cholesterol, and Zeagen, a valuable
white corn fiber gum.
Commercializing these new products could also lower production costs
for other corn-derived products like fuel ethanol. Replacing imported
petroleum with home-grown fuel ethanol could benefit the national
economy. This technology has the potential to create new jobs, provide
new uses for agricultural byproducts, increase income for processors
and growers, and develop healthy new foods for consumers.
The patent for the corn fiber oil will be jointly held by ARS and
the University of Massachusetts, where feeding studies with hamsters
indicated that the oil significantly lowered total serum cholesterol
and LDL cholesterol--the kind that clogs the arteries.
Both the oil and the gum were discovered at the ARS
Eastern Regional Research Center
in Wyndmoor, Penn. ARS National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria, Ill.,
collaborated on the oil research.
Corn fiber is a low-value byproduct of wet milling, the industrial
process that produces starch, sweeteners, fuel grade ethanol and other
products from corn. About 4 million tons of fiber--which could yield
about 80,000 tons of corn fiber oil-- are produced by the corn
processing industry each year. This waste byproduct is now sold for
about 5 cents a pound as a low-cost ingredient in cattle rations.
Monsanto, St. Louis, Mo., has licensed the oil technology and plans
to develop a variety of foods and food ingredients aimed at lowering
cholesterol. The gum is extracted in the form of a smooth, white
powder, bland in flavor and aroma, that could be used in foods as an
emulsifier, a soluble dietary fiber or a thickener.
The National Starch and Chemical Co., Bridgewater, N.J., is working
with ARS to further develop the gum, which also has potential
industrial applications for use in adhesives and water-based paint
thickeners.
A story about the corn fiber oil research appears in the December
issue of Agricultural Research magazine. The story also is on
the World Wide Web at:
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/dec97/corn1297.htm
Scientific contacts: Kevin B. Hicks, Robert A. Moreau, and
Landis W. Doner, ARS Eastern
Regional Research Center,
Plant Science
and Technology Unit, Wyndmoor, Penn., phone (215) 233-6580, fax
233-6406, rmoreau@arserrc.gov,
khicks@arserrc.gov,
ldoner@arserrc.gov; and
Robert A. Norton, ARS, National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research, Peoria, Ill.,
phone (309) 681-6251, fax 681-6693,
nortonra@mail.ncaur.usda.gov.
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