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ARS Home » Southeast Area » New Orleans, Louisiana » Southern Regional Research Center » Commodity Utilization Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #286006

Title: Development of an industrial method to quantitatively measure carry-over amylase activity in raw and refined sugars

Author
item Eggleston, Gillian
item Gober, Jessica
item St Cyr, Eldwin

Submitted to: International Sugar Journal
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 10/10/2012
Publication Date: 2/1/2013
Citation: Eggleston, G., Gober, J., St Cyr, E. 2013. Development of an industrial method to quantitatively measure carry-over amylase activity in raw and refined sugars. International Sugar Journal. 115(1370):123-131.

Interpretive Summary: In recent years, there has been increased concern over carry-over or residual activity of high temperature (HT) and very high temperature (VHT) stable amylases (enzymes that break down starch) in white, refined sugars from refineries to various food manufacturing industries and other end-users. There was an urgent need for an industrial method to measure carry-over amylase in crystalline sugar products. A selective method has been developed using Phadebas® blue starch, which is highly specific for '-amylase activity, has few reagents, and only uses existing equipment at the factory and refinery. The conditions of the method are described as well as method validation results. Carry-over activity detected in raw sugars tended to be higher than in refined, white sugars.

Technical Abstract: In recent years, there has been increased concern over carry-over activity of mostly high temperature (HT) and very high temperature (VHT) stable amylases in white, refined sugars from refineries to various food manufacturing industries and other end-users. HT and VHT stable amylases were developed for much larger markets than the sugar industry with harsher processing conditions. There was an urgent need for an industrial method to measure carry-over amylase in crystalline sugar products. A selective method has been developed using Phadebas® blue starch, which is highly specific for alpha-amylase activity, has few reagents, and only uses existing equipment at the factory and refinery. Raw or refined cane sugars are diluted 60:40 w/v in calcium chloride-Tris buffer (pH 6.0) and mixed with a Phadebas® tablet and incubated at 37 oC for 45 min. The absorbance of the solution after gravity filtration is measured directly on a spectrophotometer at 620 nm. The presence of Ca2+ ions dramatically enhanced the amylase activity. Prolonged incubation past the optimum time of 45 min only reduced the sensitivity. The most accurate results were obtained when a standard curve was generated from standards that included a 60 Brix white beet sucrose solution. When carry-over activity was detected in raw sugars they tended to be higher than in refined, white sugars because less processing time is available to deactivate the enzyme. The mean activity range detected for refined sugars known to have detrimentally affected the texture of starch puddings was 101 to 145 COU/L (Carry Over Units/Liter) and 272 to 552 COU/L for raw sugars. The lower limit of detection for the industrial method was approximately 25 (COU/L). Precision generally improved with increased activities. Relative standard deviations (RSD) for refined sugars ranged from ~12 to 20% with no unsatisfactory performance z scores and only ~9.5% of z scores were questionable. The best data and performance statistics were observed for a raw sugar of mean activity of 552.3 COU/L and RSD value of 8.4%.