Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine Clarification

Chitosan is a chitin-derived fiber, extracted from the shellfish shells, a by-product of the fish industry, or from fungi grown in bioreactors. In oenology, it is used for the control of <i>Brettanomyces</i> spp., for the prevention of ferric, copper, and protein casse and for clarificat...

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Main Authors: Veronica Vendramin, Gaia Spinato, Simone Vincenzi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-05-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/10/4417
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spelling doaj-afdf299e682a49b28986b618e66b680e2021-05-31T23:53:56ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-05-01114417441710.3390/app11104417Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine ClarificationVeronica Vendramin0Gaia Spinato1Simone Vincenzi2Centre for Research in Viticulture and Enology (CIRVE), University of Padova, Viale XXVIII Aprile 14, 31015 Conegliano, TV, ItalyCentre for Research in Viticulture and Enology (CIRVE), University of Padova, Viale XXVIII Aprile 14, 31015 Conegliano, TV, ItalyCentre for Research in Viticulture and Enology (CIRVE), University of Padova, Viale XXVIII Aprile 14, 31015 Conegliano, TV, ItalyChitosan is a chitin-derived fiber, extracted from the shellfish shells, a by-product of the fish industry, or from fungi grown in bioreactors. In oenology, it is used for the control of <i>Brettanomyces</i> spp., for the prevention of ferric, copper, and protein casse and for clarification. The International Organisation of Vine and Wine established the exclusive utilization of fungal chitosan to avoid the eventuality of allergic reactions. This work focuses on the differences between two chitosan categories, fungal and animal chitosan, characterizing several samples in terms of chitin content and degree of deacetylation. In addition, different acids were used to dissolve chitosans, and their effect on viscosity and on the efficacy in wine clarification were observed. The results demonstrated that even if fungal and animal chitosans shared similar chemical properties (deacetylation degree and chitin content), they showed different viscosity depending on their molecular weight but also on the acid used to dissolve them. A significant difference was discovered on their fining properties, as animal chitosans showed a faster and greater sedimentation compared to the fungal ones, independently from the acid used for their dissolution. This suggests that physical–chemical differences in the molecular structure occur between the two chitosan categories and that this significantly affects their technologic (oenological) properties.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/10/4417fungal chitosananimal chitosanwine clarificationdissolving acid comparison
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Veronica Vendramin
Gaia Spinato
Simone Vincenzi
spellingShingle Veronica Vendramin
Gaia Spinato
Simone Vincenzi
Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine Clarification
Applied Sciences
fungal chitosan
animal chitosan
wine clarification
dissolving acid comparison
author_facet Veronica Vendramin
Gaia Spinato
Simone Vincenzi
author_sort Veronica Vendramin
title Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine Clarification
title_short Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine Clarification
title_full Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine Clarification
title_fullStr Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine Clarification
title_full_unstemmed Shellfish Chitosan Potential in Wine Clarification
title_sort shellfish chitosan potential in wine clarification
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Chitosan is a chitin-derived fiber, extracted from the shellfish shells, a by-product of the fish industry, or from fungi grown in bioreactors. In oenology, it is used for the control of <i>Brettanomyces</i> spp., for the prevention of ferric, copper, and protein casse and for clarification. The International Organisation of Vine and Wine established the exclusive utilization of fungal chitosan to avoid the eventuality of allergic reactions. This work focuses on the differences between two chitosan categories, fungal and animal chitosan, characterizing several samples in terms of chitin content and degree of deacetylation. In addition, different acids were used to dissolve chitosans, and their effect on viscosity and on the efficacy in wine clarification were observed. The results demonstrated that even if fungal and animal chitosans shared similar chemical properties (deacetylation degree and chitin content), they showed different viscosity depending on their molecular weight but also on the acid used to dissolve them. A significant difference was discovered on their fining properties, as animal chitosans showed a faster and greater sedimentation compared to the fungal ones, independently from the acid used for their dissolution. This suggests that physical–chemical differences in the molecular structure occur between the two chitosan categories and that this significantly affects their technologic (oenological) properties.
topic fungal chitosan
animal chitosan
wine clarification
dissolving acid comparison
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/10/4417
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