Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification. / Xu, X.; Mu, Huiling; Skands, A.R.H.; Høy, Carl-Erik; Adler-Nissen, Jens.

In: J A O C S, Vol. 76, No. 2, 01.02.1999, p. 175-181.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Xu, X, Mu, H, Skands, ARH, Høy, C-E & Adler-Nissen, J 1999, 'Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification', J A O C S, vol. 76, no. 2, pp. 175-181.

APA

Xu, X., Mu, H., Skands, A. R. H., Høy, C-E., & Adler-Nissen, J. (1999). Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification. J A O C S, 76(2), 175-181.

Vancouver

Xu X, Mu H, Skands ARH, Høy C-E, Adler-Nissen J. Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification. J A O C S. 1999 Feb 1;76(2):175-181.

Author

Xu, X. ; Mu, Huiling ; Skands, A.R.H. ; Høy, Carl-Erik ; Adler-Nissen, Jens. / Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification. In: J A O C S. 1999 ; Vol. 76, No. 2. pp. 175-181.

Bibtex

@article{3f6cbf94354d41ee9a4a456fd041a9d0,
title = "Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification",
abstract = "Diacylglycerols (DAG) are important intermediates in lipase-catalyzed interesterification, but a high DAG concentration in the reaction mixture results in a high DAG content in the final product. We have previously shown that a high DAG concentration in the reaction mixture increases the degree of acyl migration, thus adding to the formation of by-products. In the present study we examined the influence of water content, reaction temperature, enzyme load, substrate molar ratio (oil/capric acid), and reaction time on the formation of DAG in batch reactors. We used response surface methodology (RSM) to minimize the numbers of experiments. The DAG content of the product was dependent on all parameters examined except reaction time. DAG formation increased with increasing water content, enzyme load, reaction temperature, and substrate ratio. The content of sn-1,3-DAG was higher than that of sn-1,2-DAG under all conditions tested, and the ratio between the contents of the former compounds and the latter increased with increasing temperature and reaction time. The water content, enzyme load, and substrate ratio had no significant effect on this ratio. The DAG content was positively correlated with both the incorporation of acyl donors and the degree of acyl migration.",
author = "X. Xu and Huiling Mu and A.R.H. Skands and Carl-Erik H{\o}y and Jens Adler-Nissen",
year = "1999",
month = feb,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "76",
pages = "175--181",
journal = "Oil & Soap",
issn = "0003-021X",
publisher = "Springer",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Parameters Affecting Diacylglycerol Formation during the Production of Specific-Structured Lipids by Lipase-Catalyzed Interesterification

AU - Xu, X.

AU - Mu, Huiling

AU - Skands, A.R.H.

AU - Høy, Carl-Erik

AU - Adler-Nissen, Jens

PY - 1999/2/1

Y1 - 1999/2/1

N2 - Diacylglycerols (DAG) are important intermediates in lipase-catalyzed interesterification, but a high DAG concentration in the reaction mixture results in a high DAG content in the final product. We have previously shown that a high DAG concentration in the reaction mixture increases the degree of acyl migration, thus adding to the formation of by-products. In the present study we examined the influence of water content, reaction temperature, enzyme load, substrate molar ratio (oil/capric acid), and reaction time on the formation of DAG in batch reactors. We used response surface methodology (RSM) to minimize the numbers of experiments. The DAG content of the product was dependent on all parameters examined except reaction time. DAG formation increased with increasing water content, enzyme load, reaction temperature, and substrate ratio. The content of sn-1,3-DAG was higher than that of sn-1,2-DAG under all conditions tested, and the ratio between the contents of the former compounds and the latter increased with increasing temperature and reaction time. The water content, enzyme load, and substrate ratio had no significant effect on this ratio. The DAG content was positively correlated with both the incorporation of acyl donors and the degree of acyl migration.

AB - Diacylglycerols (DAG) are important intermediates in lipase-catalyzed interesterification, but a high DAG concentration in the reaction mixture results in a high DAG content in the final product. We have previously shown that a high DAG concentration in the reaction mixture increases the degree of acyl migration, thus adding to the formation of by-products. In the present study we examined the influence of water content, reaction temperature, enzyme load, substrate molar ratio (oil/capric acid), and reaction time on the formation of DAG in batch reactors. We used response surface methodology (RSM) to minimize the numbers of experiments. The DAG content of the product was dependent on all parameters examined except reaction time. DAG formation increased with increasing water content, enzyme load, reaction temperature, and substrate ratio. The content of sn-1,3-DAG was higher than that of sn-1,2-DAG under all conditions tested, and the ratio between the contents of the former compounds and the latter increased with increasing temperature and reaction time. The water content, enzyme load, and substrate ratio had no significant effect on this ratio. The DAG content was positively correlated with both the incorporation of acyl donors and the degree of acyl migration.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0033077558&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0033077558

VL - 76

SP - 175

EP - 181

JO - Oil & Soap

JF - Oil & Soap

SN - 0003-021X

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 45573483