Enzyme Solutions for Fruit Processors

January 1, 2003

20 Min Read
Enzyme           Solutions for Fruit Processors

January 2003

Enzyme Solutions for Fruit Processors

By Suanne J. KlahorstContributing Editor

Enzymes — protein molecules with catalytic functions — are among the most unique and natural processing aids used in the food and beverage industry. In fact, the manufacture of many of today’s processed fruits and vegetables, wines, and juices would not be possible without the use of enzymes. Not only do they function as catalysts for many important reactions; they meet the natural criteria by virtue of being made by living organisms.

The basicsEven with the understanding we have of genomics and how proteins are coded for and expressed in cells, we still have to rely on the cellular systems of living organisms to build a host of complex enzyme molecules cheaply and efficiently. All organisms digest, metabolize and grow through the reactions of a nearly incomprehensible number of specific enzymes. Most raw foods contain native, or endogenous, enzymes that are inactivated when heated or during processing. Strong acids, such as stomach acid, can also inactivate enzymes in raw foods, though some enzymes may survive the digestive tract.

Most commercial enzyme preparations come from bacterial or fungal fermentation — although some are extracted from plant or animal parts. A common plant-derived enzyme is papain, a protein-degrading enzyme from papaya that was once a common ingredient in meat tenderizers, and is still used in brewing and other protein-modification applications. Chymosin, a widely used animal enzyme, is a specific type of rennet (sometimes called rennin) that is a very selective clotting protease extracted from calf digestive organs. Chymosin is marketed for production of cheese curd, and several types of traditional cheese cannot be duplicated without it.

Enzymes have a positive reputation associated with health. Active enzymes are often taken as dietary supplements to aid digestion. An example of a supplement used in tablet form is lactase, which aids lactose digestion and is useful to lactose-intolerant individuals.

Enzymes are specifically designed for their target molecules — their substrates — by virtue of their shape, size, and the chemical charges that precisely fit and bond to the substrate molecule. The section of the enzyme that binds the substrate is called the active site. An advantage of using enzymes is that they are specific and do not interact with other components in the food or beverage. Another advantage is that by catalyzing the same reactions repeatedly as long as the substrate is available (referred to as turnover), they can be used at very low concentration. Eventually, as the end products of the enzyme reaction increase in concentration, the reaction is temporarily inhibited by feedback inhibition. For example, if an enzyme catalyzes the breakdown of polymer into glucose, high levels of glucose will likely begin to inhibit the enzyme activity.

Most enzymes added in fruit processing cleave bonds the way that ripening enzymes do; however, in the case of processing, the ripening occurs at a faster rate and in a tank. With a few exceptions, commercial enzymes for fruit and vegetable processing are of the hydrolytic variety, reducing the molecular size of plant and animal constituents. Fruit-processing enzymes are often produced by fungal organisms and are not as heat-stable as the bacterial amylases used in high fructose corn syrup production, which can withstand temperatures of 100º C. Pasteurization temperatures or other heat treatments during packaging denature commercial fruit- and vegetable-processing enzymes. Denatured fruit-processing enzymes only contribute a miniscule amount to the total protein content of the food; hence they fall more under the category of processing aids than of food additives.

The enzyme for all seasons Fruit and wine processors have relied mainly on enzymes produced by the fungal organism Aspergillus niger and its subspecies Aspergillus aculeatus. The most indispensable of these enzymes is pectinase, so named because it is specific to pectin. Pectin — a polymer of repeating units of galacturonic acid — is one of the essential structural molecules found in fruits and vegetables. Natural pectinases in the fruit hydrolyze it during ripening. In fruit chemistry, pectin is linked to methyl esters or other polymers. The number of methyl esters on a pectin backbone is described as the degree of esterification, or DE. A 1% solution of esterified pectin forms a strong gel at low pH in the presence of sucrose. Other polymers found with pectin might be composed sugars, such as repeating arabinose units (arabans) or chains of galactose (galactans). Pectins are frequently associated with cellulose and hemicellulose.

The tendency of pectin to form gels acts as both a blessing and a curse for fruit processors. While adequate pectin is essential to create gels in jams, jellies and fillings, the presence of this soluble fibril in juice or juice concentrate is a problem for the production of clarified juices. Every clarified-juice processor performs a pectin test in which juice is mixed with several parts of alcohol until the pectin precipitates into white threads. Once the precipitate is no longer visible, the juice is deemed depectinized and can be concentrated or bottled. Juices may not require complete depectinization if the final product is a single-strength juice, but depectinization is essential for the production of concentrated fruit syrups that are later reconstituted into beverages. If a juice is not depectinized, colloidal pectin may precipitate in the final beverage. Reconstituted juice may exhibit turbidity, or a haze, if pectin remains in suspension, or it might combine into larger particles that settle to the bottom of the bottle. Juice-concentrate production is not possible without depectinization for other practical reasons. Pectin contributes viscosity and causes problems for the operation of the evaporator, the equipment that removes water and concentrates the fruit sugars to a 70% sugar syrup.

The term pectinase refers to a mixture of specific enzymes that break down pectin by hydrolyzing the polymer backbone and its side chains. Pectin lyase, polygalacturase and methyl esterase are three types of enzymes that achieve the complete degradation of pectin. Pectin methylesterase does not reduce the length of the pectin backbone but strips off methyl esters. These side chains are important to the action of polygalacturonase, which can’t bond to the backbone until the steric influence of the esters is removed. Once the methyl esters are removed, the pectin has available sites for the bonding of calcium ions. This crosslinking forms another type of gel. Unlike polygalcturonase, pectin lyase can hydrolyze methylated pectin.

Practice made perfectConventional wisdom dictated that the more types of pectinases added to the fruit pulp, the better, because the action of the enzyme mixture would more thoroughly macerate the pulp. This, in turn, would enable the expression of more juice in the press and would provide plenty of time to eliminate the pectin. The enzyme preparations used during the initial 30 or 40 years of fruit processing with enzymes were made by fungal organisms that produced mixtures of three pectinases, and sometimes they contained cellulase and hemicellulase activities as well. These additional activities acted synergistically to disassemble a wide variety of molecules of small and large molecular weights. Exposing the pulp to these enzyme mixtures released many soluble polymers into the juice, resulting in a product very high in soluble and insoluble solids. The solids and colloids were then filtered out to recover the clarified juice.

It became apparent during the 1990s that the use — and sometimes, overuse — of these very effective hydrolytic enzymes could cause problems as well as solve them. Fruit used for juice is seldom of fresh, table-produce quality: it is undersized, sometimes damaged, and frequently has higher ratios of skin and fiber to juicy pulp. The goal of the processing industry is to push the envelope in terms of extracting all the juice possible, reduce waste and make culled fruit into a profitable business.

When enzymes were added liberally to macerate the fruit (a process called liquefaction), they also liberally released other degraded polymers and fibers, such as arabans. An unexpected haze developed in the concentrates during storage, an emergency for juice processors who sell on quality parameters that include clarity. Suddenly, the industry was clamoring for the enzyme arabinase to eliminate the araban hazes found in the juice. Pectinases are now sold with and without a specified arabinase activity for processors who occasionally need to prevent the formation of this haze. Araban haze is not common to all juice, but has been observed in apple and pear processing.

As knowledge of specific enzyme activities and their actions on fruit increased, conventional wisdom gave way to new technologies. Fruit processors discovered that more enzymatic breakdown is not necessarily more productive in terms of quality and yield of clarified juices. For cloudy-juice processors, the overuse of enzymes can destabilize the cloud and cause settling.

One advantage of new enzyme technology is the availability of monocomponent enzymes of higher purity and strength. Gary Johnson, regional marketing manager for the beverage business at Novozymes North America, Inc., Franklinton, NC, explained how new products are addressing this issue: “For the fruit-juice processor who is just interested in releasing juice without creating fine solids and colloids that clog filters and impair pressing, we developed a pure pectin lyase that will deliver the required juice yields without degrading the structure of the macerated fruit required for efficient pressing. This pure pectin lyase is known for its high activity at low pH and higher temperature, making it an excellent choice for low-pH fruits. This enzyme is user-friendly because it cannot cause problems if it is overdosed. It degrades only the pectin and cannot harm the mash structure. Pectin lyase also cannot create cellobiose, methanol or additional galacturonic acid, compounds that are a concern to juice processors when using mixtures of pectinase enzymes. There is no point in adding activities that are not required when we can produce enzymes now that feature only the specific activity required for optimal yield in the juice-recovery process.”

Cellobiose, a dissacharide produced during cellulose degradation, is an indigestible sugar that is associated with diarrhea in babies. It is also considered to be an indicator of adulterated juice, since cellulase enzymes could potentially break down some of the cellulose in filter aids and become part of the pressed juice. Food companies take the conservative position of limiting cellobiose in juice as a safeguard, although scientists are still debating what levels are acceptable.

Pectin lyase is just as useful for producing cloud-stable juice as it is for clarified juice, since the presence of methyl esters is important to maintain the stability of the cloud and they are unaffected by pectin lyase. A typical enzyme dosage before the press ranges from 40 to 80 ml of enzyme per ton, with more required for fruits that have been in cold storage. Manufacturers add the enzyme before pressing, and again after pressing, until a negative alcohol test results. Since the amount of enzyme added is small compared to the amount of fruit-pulp treated, the enzyme is diluted first and metered in with a pump to disperse it throughout the mashed fruit before pressing the juice from the pulp. Pear, apple, grape and berry juices can be heated to 50º to 65º C to quickly depectinize them, since the higher the temperature, the faster the enzyme turnover. For premium juice concentrates with minimum browning and maximum aroma, juices are depectinzed at temperatures as low as 15º to 25º C. The lower temperature also inhibits the microbial counts from the native yeasts and bacteria that are found abundantly on these raw products.

Understand the enzymesThe selection of the enzyme best-suited to a particular fruit, problem or desired result is usually made by running a product test — first on the bench-top and then in the processing plant. The results of these tests can be somewhat misleading, since fruit changes in composition from year to year in response to weather and harvest conditions, and among different varieties of the same fruit. If a plant processes several types of fruit, a different enzyme might be used depending on the fruit’s pH, the processing temperature, the ripeness or the plant personnel’s past experiences.

Living organisms produce enzymes that have unique characteristics inherent in each production strain, even if the production organism is the same species. That makes the job of enzyme selection somewhat more complex than, say, buying a bag of citric acid. Actually, enzyme use and selection requires a degree of skill that begins with understanding the nature of the primary catalytic activities of the enzyme mixtures and their pH and temperature optimums, and being able to recognize a good and bad result when enzymes are used in the plant.

Ken Stewart, technical sales representative, GusmerCellulo Co., Fresno, CA, frequently consults with his customers in the Pacific Northwest, where the largest concentration of a wide variety of raw fruit is processed every year. “My customers have a good understanding of the predominate activities in the enzyme products they use for fruit processing — particularly how they affect the raw materials,” he says. “They know their substrate and the molecular basis by which it is hydrolyzed. It is useful to know how other processing aids may interact with enzymes. Bentonite, for example, will bind enzyme proteins and remove them from the juice. Inactivation of the enzyme is also important for the juice-concentrate industry, because reconstituted juice may be used in a variety of products that are later stabilized with gums or pectins that could be affected by residual enzyme activities. Customers who buy fruit concentrates may be checking for residual enzyme activity.”

Checking in on citrusCitrus is a rich source of pectin. After oranges are mechanically pulped, the raw juice is separated from the solid pulp residue. Water and pectinase are added to the pulp and additional juice is recovered during pulp washing. Some of the pulp is then added back to the juice extract. Pasteurization of the juice inactivates the native and the added pectinase enzyme extracts. Producers use high temperatures and vacuum evaporators to retain juice-concentrate flavor, and add pectinase before evaporation to prevent gelling. Manufacturers may also use it to extract essential oils from orange peel. The albedo portion of citrus peel consists primarily of pectin, so pectinase and cellulase enzyme blends were developed to facilitate the mechanical peeling of oranges and grapefruits. After the fruit is mechanically scored or pricked to allow exposure to the enzyme solution, the fruit is warmed and exposed to an enzyme bath to soften the peel. Mechanical peelers finish the job with a light cleanup by hand, resulting in a cleanly peeled final product. Dipping the peeled segments in citric acid, which denatures the enzyme and reduces microbial contamination, inactivates the enzyme.

Enzymes are also useful for processing whole fruit and vegetable pieces. Processed fruits can become soft and susceptible to handling damage, especially when cut into small-enough pieces for inclusion in fruit-flavored yogurts, baked goods or dessert toppings. A pure pectin methylesterase demethylates pectin on the surface of fruit or vegetable pieces. Once the enzyme cleaves the methyl ester and calcium is added, the pectin forms a calcium-pectin matrix that contributes to the firmness of cut produce after undergoing heating or freezing. This enzyme has been used to improve the firmness of strawberries, apples, cherries, mangoes, bananas, peaches, apricots, tomatoes and blueberries. The enzyme is added at 0.05% to 0.20%, based on the weight of fruit treated. Pectin methylesterase provides firming benefits in canned, individually quick-frozen, vacuum-infusion, high-pressure-sterilization and bulk-pack freezing processes. Unlike enzymes that are inactivated with freezing, it survives freezing and continues to provide a benefit in the final product.

Some enzymes with that wineOne of the most critical uses of enzymes in fruit processing is for winemaking. In white and red wines clarity is critical to final quality, as cloudy wines will never be in style. In winemaking, nearly every part of the process is crucial to quality, including the time and method of harvest, the transport of the grapes, the crushing, the pressing, and the hold times in the juice tank. Using a depectinizing enzyme is one of the simplest things winemakers can do to ensure final-product quality.

Winemakers use enzymes discriminately and conservatively. Even during critical times such as “the crush” — when the grapes are loaded and trucks are lined up for miles to deliver their sugary cargo — waiting for juice to depectinize is not the time-limiting factor it is in juice-concentrate production. During fermentation, the juice is held in tanks for several days. Depectinization begins by the action of endogenous enzymes in the grapes, so the winemaker can use discretion in adding enzymes, depending on berry maturity and berry variety, and adapt enzyme addition to his production parameters. Generally pectinase is added early in the fermentation, before the alcohol content becomes too high.

A more-valuable wine-production application for pectinase is the addition of enzymes during pressing to extract additional color and flavor from red grape skins. Wine flavor hinges on its tannins, which are found in specific structures of the berry. Enzyme technology has advanced sufficiently to selectively extract tannins known to contribute to quality and flavor. Winemakers refer to these as “soft tannins,” unlike the more undesirable tannins that are bound to protein and contribute bitterness. The enzymes are fairly ineffective on the seeds — a fortunate benefit, since seed tannins should not predominate over the tannins and polyphenols extracted from the pulp near the skins. The skins and pulp cells also entrap the anthocyanins, and manufacturers prefer fermenting red wines on the skins to extract as much color as possible from skins before pressing. Using an enzyme allows more color and flavor extraction from the berry cells during pressing.

But, as the winemaker knows, it is not how much color you have at the beginning: it is how much you have at the end of the fermentation that counts. Modern methods of analysis show that in wine, as enzyme levels increase, so does the quantity of stable anthocyanins, polyphenols, glucosides, tannin-flavans and flavonols. Typical use levels can be as low as 3 to 6 grams of enzyme preparation to 100 liters of must.

New solutions for protein problems Protein content poses one of the standard obstacles when producing clarified wines. Tannin and protein can form colloidal precipitates that can settle out in the bottle as the wine ages and matures. Winemakers use various methods to remove protein; including heat and fining agents that pull proteins from the wine with positively charged molecules. Fining is done post-fermentation and before bottling. Most fining agents, such as bentonite, are not specific to protein, but also bind to some of the beneficial components that are found in clarified wines, including color and vitamins. Waste bentonite is also a disposal problem.

Another method of removing colloidal tannin-protein complexes is cold stabilization. This method requires holding the wine until the offending colloids eventually settle to the bottom. This requires time, tankage and energy in a decade in which refrigeration and space represent significant costs to the wine-growing regions of California, Oregon and Washington. Cold stabilization is also used in grape-concentrate processing to remove tartrates, tartaric-acid crystals that form in grape juice during cold storage. Concord-grape juice is particularly rich in tartrates that require removal before concentrating the juice. Protein is also a problem in this process since it inhibits formation of tartrate crystals, lengthening the stabilization period.

Valley Research, South Bend, IN, has developed a new protease that can hydrolyze heat-unstable protein in wine and fruit juices. The use of this protease can replace a substantial amount of bentonite for protein removal. Tom Wong, Ph.D., an advisor for Valley Research, sees many useful applications for protease enzymes in wines and juices. “Small peptides and amino acids from the hydrolyzed protein could be utilized by the yeast and prevent stuck fermentations — the fermentations where the yeast quit before all the sugar is depleted,” he says. “Protein in wine causes other problems too, including foaming and inhibiting crystallization of potassium bitartrate in cold stabilization of wine. Elimination of protein could solve these problems also, resulting in more product recovery, and savings in labor and energy costs.”

Wong notes that in teaming up with the company, he has been given the opportunity to demonstrate proteases for low-acid applications that derive from the same organism that produces pectinase, A. niger. This product offers new options for juice processors and winemakers seeking alternative methods for eliminating protein reactions.

Proteases for winemaking were nonexistent for years because most of the proteases available for use in food systems do not exhibit activity at wine pH or perform very well in the presence of ethanol. FDA considers proteases GRAS for food use, and protease derived from A. niger is approved for winemaking in the United States, per Title 27 of the Code of Federal Regulations, vol. 1, for alcohol, tobacco and firearms.

Tasty treatmentsAnother use of enzymes in wineries involves a mechanism for flavor development that was reported in literature in the late 1980s. It has long been known that the action of the enzyme beta-glucosidase, an enzyme found in grapes and yeast, can improve white-wine aroma. This enzyme was found in varying amounts in pectinase enzyme extracts and, now that the benefits of this and similar enzymes activities are known, pectinases have been selected and marketed especially for this purpose. Beta-glucosidase is effective on glycosides — chemical bonds linking important aroma compounds called monoterpenes. This enzyme is seldom used in red-wine production, since cleaving glycosides can destabilize the anthocyanin structure and compromise the wine’s color. The probability of success when using enzymes to release flavor depends on the grape varietal, the activity of the enzyme chosen and the initial quality of the wine to be improved. The enzyme is added after fermentation when sugar is low, since glucose is an end product and inhibits the enzyme’s action.

Like many aspects of winemaking, using enzymes for flavor development is both art and science. Sensory evaluation is the preferred method to determine the efficacy of the aroma development, and winemakers will utilize products with a specified beta-glucosidase activity. For white wines, especially muscatel or Gewürztraminer, cleaving these aroma precursors has been shown to release the desired terpenols that improve flavor. Other activities in pectinase reported to release aroma are rhamnosidase, apiosidase and arabinofuranosidase, each specific to respective chemical bonds. These precursors are also found in other fruits and vegetables that contain similar types of compounds.

Another enzymatic flavor improver is an enzyme preparation called naringinase. Oranges and other citrus fruits contain naringin, a glycolated flavonone. This is the major bitter compound in citrus and can be converted to less-bitter compounds by a similar mixture containing rhamnosidase and a glucosidase. Wong explained that some pectinase enzymes can eliminate off-flavors in wines as well, such as “grassiness” or “green” characters of white wine, while also offering functional benefits, such as better cold-settling of wine solids and more-compact lees.

One reason that aromas are so much more detectable in wines is the presence of ethanol, which volatilizes the aromas into the nose so effectively. As flavor becomes more important in the production of juice-based beverages, food companies will learn to use enzymes to release endogenous fruit and vegetable flavors the way that flavor companies and wineries do.

This and other new uses may be in the future for enzymes used in fruit or vegetable processing, and it’s likely that enzyme suppliers will offer more refinements to these valuable processing aids.

Suanne J. Klahorst is associate director of the California Institute of Food and Agricultural Research at UC-Davis, where federal grants fund the evaluation of enzymes for the conversion of food- and agricultural-processing waste to renewable fuels and bioactive chemicals.

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