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Read the
magazine
story to find out more. |
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 Improved methods
devised by Agricultural Research Service scientists for purifying and modifying
zein, a corn protein mainly used to coat paper, could usher in new cosmetic and
biomedical applications. Click the image for more information about
it. |
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Corn Protein Polymers Inspire Diverse New
Uses
By Jan
Suszkiw November 20, 2008
Zein, a major corn protein, is primarily used in specialty
coatings, such as for paper. Now, improved methods of purifying and modifying
zein devised by Agricultural Research
Service (ARS) scientists could usher in new cosmetic and biomedical
applications as well.
Zein has been commercially available for more than 60 years. But
costly purification steps necessary to eliminate zein's odor and yellow color
have hampered its widespread commercial use. Chemist
David
Sessa examined the problem in studies at the ARS
National
Center for Agricultural Utilization Research in Peoria, Ill.
Based on his findings, which included isolating the primary sources of
zein's color and odor, Sessa devised an improved approach to purifying the
protein and turning it into two types of polymers: hydrogels and microspheres.
Existing methods of purifying zein use activated carbons (AC), which
are porous, charcoal-like substances that bind to and trap the compounds
responsible for the protein's color and odor. However, these AC-based methods
lose between 37 and 95 percent of the zein in the process of purifying it. This
increases production costs and restricts zein's broader commercial use.
Sessa's ground-up approach included examining AC alternatives known as
"zeolites," silicate- or clay-based particles whose pores act as molecular
sieves in which zein's color and odor compounds are trapped during
purification. His use of two synthetic zeolites, dubbed types "A" and "X,"
increased zein yields by 25 percent during purification.
Two other key innovations included an ultraviolet-light-based method
to monitor zein's deodorization progress, and an algorithm-controlled system to
control zein's directional flow inside specialized columns where purification
occurs.
Sessa envisions several cosmetic and biomedical applications for
zein-based microspheres and hydrogels, including dissolvable drug capsules and
tissue scaffolding. On the food front, zein has potential as a chewing gum
ingredient.
Read more
about this research in the November/December 2008 issue of Agricultural
Research magazine.
ARS is a scientific research agency of the
U.S. Department of Agriculture.