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Laccases in Food Industry: Bioprocessing, Potential Industrial and Biotechnological Applications.

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TLDR
This review will critically describe the production sources of laccase as by-product from food industry, bioprocessing of food industry by-products using lAccase, and its application in food industry.
Abstract
Laccase is a multi-copper oxidase that catalyzes the oxidation of one electron of a wide range of phenolic compounds. The enzyme is considered eco-friendly because it requires molecular oxygen as co-substrate for the catalysis and it yields water as the sole by-product. Laccase is commonly produced by fungi but also by some bacteria, insects and plants. Due it is capable of using a wide variety of phenolic and non-phenolic substrates, laccase has potential applications in the food, pharmaceutical and environmental industries; in addition, it has been used since many years in the bleaching of paper pulp. Fungal laccases are mainly extracellular enzyme that can be recovered from the residual compost of industrial production of edible mushrooms as Agaricus bisporus and Pleurotus ostreatus. It has also been isolated from microorganisms present in wastewater. The great potential of laccase lies in its ability to oxidize lignin, one component of lignocellulosic materials, this feature can be widely exploited on the pretreatment for agro-food wastes valorization. Laccase is one of the enzymes that fits very well in the circular economy concept, this concept has more benefits over linear economy; based on "reduce-reuse-recycle" theory. Currently, biorefinery processes are booming due to the need to generate clean biofuels that do not come from oil. In that sense, laccase is capable of degrading lignocellulosic materials that serve as raw material in these processes, so the enzyme's potential is evident. This review will critically describe the production sources of laccase as by-product from food industry, bioprocessing of food industry by-products using laccase, and its application in food industry.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Advances in laccase-triggered anabolism for biotechnology applications

TL;DR: This review elaborates the anabolic mechanisms of laccase in initiating the polymerization of natural phenolic compounds and their derivatives in vivo via radical-based self/cross-coupling and improves the enzymatic catalytic activity, stability, and reuse rate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Enzyme immobilization as a strategy towards efficient and sustainable lignocellulosic biomass conversion into chemicals and biofuels: current status and perspectives

TL;DR: Lignocellulosic biomass conversion is contextualized focusing on enzymatic hydrolysis and the benefits and drawbacks of enzyme immobilization related to biomass conversion are outlined and trends in bioreactors using immobilized enzymes are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of advances in the development of laccases for the valorization of lignin to enable the production of lignocellulosic biofuels and bioproducts.

TL;DR: A review of lignin valorization using laccases within the context of a biorefinery process can be found in this article, where the authors assess the different innovations of using Laccases and assess the latest economical advances that these innovations offered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Review of advances in the development of laccases for the valorization of lignin to enable the production of lignocellulosic biofuels and bioproducts

TL;DR: A review of lignin valorization using laccases within the context of a biorefinery process can be found in this article , where the authors assess the different innovations of using Laccases and assess the latest economical advances that these innovations offered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laccase as a Tool in Building Advanced Lignin-Based Materials.

TL;DR: In this article, the factors that affect laccase-catalyzed lignin polymerization were summarized, evaluated, and compared to identify key features that favor the polymerization.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Lignin utilization: A review of lignin depolymerization from various aspects

TL;DR: Different methods for lignin depolymerization can be divided into thermochemical treatment, mechanical treatment, chemical catalysis, and biological treatment, and their characteristics and products are extensively discussed in this article.
Journal ArticleDOI

Potential applications of laccase in the food industry

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present the potential application of Laccase in the food industry and present a review of the potential applications of this enzyme in bioremediation, beverage processing, ascorbic acid determination, sugar beet pectin gelation, baking, and biosensor.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review on lignin structure, pretreatments, fermentation reactions and biorefinery potential.

TL;DR: The current progress and developments in the pretreatment routes for enhancing lignin degradation are focused on and the liquid and gaseous biofuel production by fermentation, gasification and hybrid technologies along with the biorefinery schemes which involves the synthesis of high value-added chemicals, biochar and other valuable products are assessed.
Book ChapterDOI

Current Overview of Mushroom Production in the World

TL;DR: Per capita consumption of cultivated, edible mushrooms is expected to continue to increase as consumers become more aware of the healthful benefits of incorporating mushrooms in their diet.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laccase:A review of its past and its future in bioremediation

TL;DR: The authors critically assess the advantages, shortcomings, and future needs relating to laccase availability, effectiveness, and cost-efficiency, and also provide numerous references to the many divisions of research into this multifaceted enzyme.
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