154 results on '"Undeland, I."'
Search Results
2. Improving the Stability of Red Blood Cells in Rainbow Trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) and Herring (Clupea harengus): Potential Solutions for Post-mortem Fish Handling to Minimize Lipid Oxidation
- Author
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Ghirmai, S., Eriksson, L., Wu, H., Axelsson, M., and Undeland, I.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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3. Combining pressing and alkaline extraction to increase protein yield from Ulva fenestrata biomass
- Author
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Juul, L., Steinhagen, S., Bruhn, A., Jensen, S. K., Undeland, I., and Dalsgaard, T. K.
- Subjects
Ulva ,General Chemical Engineering ,Mechanical pressing ,Alkaline extraction ,Precipitation ,Protein extraction ,Seaweed ,Biochemistry ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Many seaweed species have a high production potential and attract interest as future protein sources. A high fiber and ash content, however, demand extraction of the protein to improve its digestibility and protein utilization in food or feed. This study explores three different approaches for protein extraction from Ulva fenestrata in order to maximize the protein extraction yield. Soluble protein was recovered either by mechanical pressing or by homogenization and osmotic shock of the biomass followed by alkaline extraction. The soluble protein was then concentrated by isoelectric precipitation. A combined procedure was carried out by pressing the biomass and following subjecting the residual pulp fraction to homogenization, osmotic shock and alkaline extraction. The three methods were ranked as follows with respect to protein extraction yield (as % of biomass protein); the combined method (23.9 ± 0.3%)> the alkaline extraction (6.8 ± 0.2%)> mechanical pressing (5.0 ± 0.2%). The significant increase when combining the methods was ascribed to a high precipitation yield after alkaline extraction of the pulp, hypothesized to be due to a reduced conductivity of the alkali-soluble protein fraction when derived from pulp rather than whole biomass.
- Published
- 2022
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4. Combining pressing and alkaline extraction to increase protein yield from Ulva fenestrata biomass
- Author
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Juul, L., primary, Steinhagen, S., additional, Bruhn, A., additional, Jensen, S.K., additional, Undeland, I., additional, and Dalsgaard, T.K., additional
- Published
- 2022
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- View/download PDF
5. Seaweed as food – Attitudes and preferences among Swedish consumers. A pilot study
- Author
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Wendin, K. and Undeland, I.
- Published
- 2020
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6. Herring (Clupea harengus) supplemented diet influences risk factors for CVD in overweight subjects
- Author
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Lindqvist, H, Langkilde, A M, Undeland, I, Rådendal, T, and Sandberg, A S
- Published
- 2007
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7. Preventing lipid oxidation in seafood
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Medina, I, primary, Rustad, T, additional, Undeland, I, additional, Hedges, N, additional, Jacobsen, C, additional, and Storrø, I, additional
- Published
- 2008
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8. Preventing lipid oxidation in seafood
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Jacobsen, C., primary, Undeland, I., additional, Storrø, I., additional, Rustad, T., additional, Hedges, N., additional, and Medina, I., additional
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- 2008
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9. Contributor contact details
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Børresen, Torger, primary, Brunsø, K., additional, Hansen, K.B., additional, Scholderer, J., additional, Honkanen, P., additional, Olsen, S.O., additional, Verbeke, W., additional, Martinsdóttir, E., additional, Sveinsdóttir, K., additional, Green-Petersen, D., additional, Hyldig, G., additional, Schelvis, R., additional, Pieniak, Z., additional, Toften, K., additional, Calvo Dopico, D., additional, Tudoran, A., additional, Kole, A., additional, Schaafsma, Gertjan, additional, Lund, E., additional, Kampman, E., additional, Thorsdottir, Inga, additional, Ramel, Alfons, additional, Brouwer, Ingeborg A., additional, Doré, Bill, additional, Bosch, A., additional, Pintó, R.M., additional, Lees, D., additional, von Bonsdorff, C.-H., additional, Croci, L., additional, De Medici, D., additional, Le Guyader, F.S., additional, Pommepuy, M., additional, Le Saux, J.C., additional, Kershaw, S., additional, Lowther, J.A., additional, Morgan, O.C., additional, Romalde, J.L., additional, Vilariño, M.L., additional, Furones, D., additional, Roque, A., additional, Guilfoyle, F., additional, Doré, B., additional, Lee, R.J., additional, Rangdale, R.E., additional, Hervio-Heath, D., additional, Lozach, S., additional, Dalgaard, P., additional, Emborg, J., additional, Kjølby, A., additional, Sorensen, N.D., additional, Ballin, N.Z., additional, Luten, J.B., additional, Careche, M., additional, Saura-Calixto, F., additional, Díaz-Rubio, M.E., additional, Borderías, A.J., additional, Sánchez-Alonso, I., additional, Sánchez-González, I., additional, Schram, E., additional, Scholten, O.E., additional, Toonen, M.A.J., additional, Carmona, P., additional, Gormley, T.R., additional, Oehlenschläger, J., additional, Mierke-Klemeyer, S., additional, Elvevoll, E., additional, Leonor Nunes, M., additional, Bandarra, N., additional, Stoknes, I., additional, Larsen, E.H., additional, Thorkelsson, G., additional, Sigurgisladottir, S., additional, Jóhannsson, R., additional, Geirsdottir, M., additional, Guérard, F., additional, Chabeaud, A., additional, Bourseau, P., additional, Vandanjon, L., additional, Jaouen, P., additional, Chaplain-Derouiniot, M., additional, Fouchereau-Peron, M., additional, Martinez-Alvarez, O., additional, Le Gal, Y., additional, Ravallec-Plé, R., additional, Picot, L., additional, Berge, J.P., additional, Delannoy, C., additional, Jakobsen, G., additional, Johansson, I., additional, Batista, I., additional, Pires, C., additional, Leroi, F., additional, Joffraud, J.J., additional, Skjerdal, T., additional, Lorentzen, G., additional, Bjørkevoll, I., additional, Olsen, R.L., additional, Pilet, M.F., additional, Prévost, H., additional, Dousset, X., additional, Matamoros, S., additional, Amarita, F., additional, Arboleya, J.C., additional, Cruz, Z., additional, Izurieta, E., additional, Lasagabaster, A., additional, Martínez de Marañón, I., additional, Miranda, I., additional, Nuin, M., additional, Olabarrieta, I., additional, Lauzon, H.L., additional, Jacobsen, C., additional, Undeland, I., additional, Storrø, I., additional, Rustad, T., additional, Hedges, N., additional, Medina, I., additional, Damsgård, Børge, additional, Johnston, Ian A., additional, Larsen, Erling P., additional, Storøy, J., additional, Senneset, Gunnar, additional, Forås, Eskil, additional, Olsen, Petter, additional, Karlsen, Kine Mari, additional, Frederiksen, Marco, additional, Pérez-Villarreal, B., additional, Amárita, F., additional, Bald, C., additional, Pardo, M.A., additional, and Sagardia, I., additional
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- 2008
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10. A comparative environmental life cycle assessment of hatchery, cultivation, and preservation of the kelp Saccharina latissima
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Thomas, J -B E, primary, Sodré Ribeiro, M, additional, Potting, J, additional, Cervin, G, additional, Nylund, G M, additional, Olsson, J, additional, Albers, E, additional, Undeland, I, additional, Pavia, H, additional, and Gröndahl, F, additional
- Published
- 2020
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11. Influence of herring (Clupea harengus) and herring fractions on metabolic status in rats fed a high energy diet
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Lindqvist, H., Sandberg, A.-S., Undeland, I., Stener-Victorin, E., Larsson, B. M., Sannaveerappa, T., Lönn, M., and Holmäng, A.
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- 2009
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12. From stale bread and brewers spent grain to a new food source using edible filamentous fungi
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Gmoser, Rebecca, Fristedt, R., Larsson, K., Undeland, I., Taherzadeh, Mohammad J, Lennartsson, Patrik R., Gmoser, Rebecca, Fristedt, R., Larsson, K., Undeland, I., Taherzadeh, Mohammad J, and Lennartsson, Patrik R.
- Abstract
By-products from the food sector with a high load of organic matter present both a waste-handling problem related to expenses and to the environment, yet also an opportunity. This study aims to increase the value of stale bread and brewers spent grain (BSG) by re-introducing these residues to the food production chain by converting them to new protein-enriched products using the edible filamentous fungi Neurospora intermedia and Rhizopusoryzae. After 6 days of solid state fermentation (at 35°C, with a95% relative humidity and moisture content of 40% in the substrate) on stale bread, a nutrient-rich fungal-fermented product was produced. The total protein content, as analyzed by total amino acids, increased from 16.5% in stale sourdough bread to 21.1% (on dry weight basis) in the final product with an improved relative ratio of essential amino acids. An increase in dietary fiber, minerals (Cu, Fe, Zn) and vitamin E, as well as an addition of vitamin D2 (0.89 µg/g dry weight sample) was obtained compared with untreated stale bread. Furthermore, addition of BSG to the sourdough bread with the aim to improve textural changes after fermentation showed promising outcomes. Cultivation of N. intermedia or R. oryzae on stale sourdough bread mixed with 6.5% or 11.8% BSG, respectively, resulted in fungal-fermented products with similar textural properties to a commercial soybean burger. Bioconversion of stale bread and BSG by fungal solid state fermentation to produce a nutrient-enriched food product was confirmed to be a successful way to minimize food waste and protein shortage. © 2020, © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
- Published
- 2020
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13. Seaweed as food – Attitudes and preferences among Swedish consumers:A pilot study
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Wendin, K., Undeland, I., Wendin, K., and Undeland, I.
- Abstract
The demand for vegetarian food is increasing and seaweeds are promising raw materials with interesting nutritional and sensory profiles. The aim of this study was to investigate the attitudes and preferences of Swedish consumers regarding seaweed as food and study differences and similarities between different consumer groups. Data from 120 adult consumers showed an overall positive attitude. More young men than women preferred seaweeds in snack products and fast food. Products containing seaweed should preferably be bought in a food store and eaten at home or in a restaurant. The most popular serving alternatives were in snacks, bread and dishes.
- Published
- 2020
14. A comparative environmental life cycle assessment of hatchery, cultivation, and preservation of the kelp Saccharina latissima.
- Author
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Thomas, J -B E, Ribeiro, M Sodré, Potting, J, Cervin, G, Nylund, G M, Olsson, J, Albers, E, Undeland, I, Pavia, H, and Gröndahl, F
- Subjects
SACCHARINA ,KELPS ,SUSTAINABILITY ,MARINE algae ,SUPPLY chains ,LAMINARIA ,MARINE plants - Abstract
Seaweed cultivation and processing industries could contribute to sustainable blue growth and the European bioeconomy. This article contributes a case study evaluation of environmental sustainability of preserved brown seaweed Saccharina latissima by means of environmental life cycle assessment of a pilot facility in Sweden. The study accounts for nutrient bioremediation and carbon capture and includes two alternative hatchery processes, a 2-ha longline cultivation, and four alternative preservation methods (hang-drying outdoors, heated air-cabinet drying, ensiling, and freezing). The study found that as a result of carbon capture and nitrogen and phosphorus uptake (bioremediation) by seaweed, more CO
2 and PO4 equivalents are (temporarily) absorbed than emitted by the supply chain. The extent of emissions is most affected by preservation methods undertaken. Impact profiles of the supply chain show that the greatest impact shares result from freezing and air-cabinet drying, both the two most energy-intensive processes, followed by the cultivation infrastructure, highlighting strategic optimization opportunities. Hatchery processes, harvesting, and the low-energy ensilage and hang-drying outdoors were found to have relatively small impact shares. These findings presage the environmentally friendliness of seaweed-based products by documenting their potential to mitigate eutrophication and climate change, even when taking a life cycle perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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15. A Strategy for the Sequential Recovery of Biomacromolecules from Red Macroalgae Porphyra umbilicalis Kützing
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Wahlström, Niklas, Harrysson, H., Undeland, I., Edlund, Ulrica, Wahlström, Niklas, Harrysson, H., Undeland, I., and Edlund, Ulrica
- Abstract
A nondestructive, multicomponent fractionation strategy has been developed to extract proteins and polysaccharides from the red macroalgae Porphyra umbilicalis collected along the west coast of Sweden and cultivated indoors under controlled conditions. First, a protein-rich fraction was extracted in an ice-cold alkaline solution. The overall protein content in Porphyra umbilicalis was estimated to be 30.6% of the dry weight, and out of that, 15.0% could be recovered. Water-soluble polysaccharides were then extracted from the insoluble residual fraction using sequential alkaline and acidic treatments at 90 °C for 4 h. Spectroscopic and chromatographic analyses of the polysaccharide fractions show that high-molecular-weight carrageenans were obtained from the alkaline extraction and a galactose-rich pectin substance was obtained from the acidic extraction. The insoluble fraction remaining after all extraction steps was rich in cellulose. An elemental analysis of Porphyra umbilicalis via scanning electron microscopy with energy-dispersive X-ray spectrometry (SEM-EDS) showed the presence of C, O, Na, Ca, Mg, Al, Cl, and S. However, no heavy metals or other toxic elements, such as Pb, Hg, and As, were found., QC 20180122
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- 2018
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16. In vitro bioaccessibility of proteins and lipids of pH-shift processed Nannochloropsis oculata microalga
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Cavonius, L R., primary, Albers, E., additional, and Undeland, I., additional
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- 2016
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17. Seafood and health: what is the full story?
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Undeland, I., Lindqvist, H., Chen-Yun, Y., Falch, E., and Luten, J.B.
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Life Science ,Wageningen Marine Research - Published
- 2009
18. Frozen storage of herring from different stocks and catching seasons. Effects on lipid oxidation
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Larsson, L., Almgren, A., Jørgensen, Bo, Olsen, R.E., Undeland, I., Larsson, L., Almgren, A., Jørgensen, Bo, Olsen, R.E., and Undeland, I.
- Published
- 2007
19. 20 - Preventing lipid oxidation in seafood
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Jacobsen, C., Undeland, I., Storre, I., Rustad, T., Hedges, N., and Medina, I.
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- 2008
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20. Preventing lipid oxidation during recovery of functional proteins from herring (Clupea harengus) fillets by an acid solubilization process
- Author
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Undeland, I, Hall, G, Wendin, Karin, Gangby, I, Rutgersson, A, Undeland, I, Hall, G, Wendin, Karin, Gangby, I, and Rutgersson, A
- Abstract
It has previously been found that a process based on solubilization at pH 2.7 gives high yields of herring muscle proteins with good functionality. In this study, the development of lipid oxidation during acid processing of herring mince was studied. It was tested how modifications of the process conditions and/or additions of antioxidants could prevent lipid oxidation during the actual process and then during ice storage of the protein isolates. Processing parameters evaluated were prewash of the mince, exposure time to pH 2.7, inclusion or exclusion of a high-speed centrifugation, and addition of antioxidants. Antioxidants tested were erythorbate (0.2%, 9.3 mM), sodium tripolyphosphate (STPP; 0.2%, 5.4 mM), ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA; 0.044%, 1.5 mM), and milk proteins (4%). The first three antioxidants were added in the prewash or during the homogenization step, whereas milk proteins were added to the final precipitate. At time 0, all isolates were analyzed for pH, moisture content, and thiobarbituric reactive substances (TBARS). Selected isolates were also analyzed for lipid and protein content. Stability during ice storage was followed in terms of odor, TBARS, and color (a*/b* values). Extensive lipid oxidation took place using the "control" process without high-speed centrifugation. This was not significantly (p <= 0.05) affected by a prewash or varied exposure time to pH 2.7. Including high-speed centrifugation (20 min, 10000g) significantly (p <= 0.05) reduced TBARS values, total lipids, a* values and b* values. Erythorbate alone, or in combination with STPP/EDTA, significantly (p <= 0.05) reduced lipid oxidation during processing if added in the prewash or homogenization step. During ice storage, better stability was gained when antioxidants were added in both of these steps and when EDTA was used instead of STPP.
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- 2005
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21. Oxidation in fatty fish during processing and storage : a literature review
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Undeland, I
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Food Engineering ,Livsmedelsvetenskap ,Livsmedelsteknik ,Food Science - Published
- 1995
22. Low molecular fish extract decreases mortality in the mouse model of doxorubicin induced acute heart failure
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OMEROVIC, E, primary, LINDBOM, M, additional, ROMUNDDAL, T, additional, LINDGARD, A, additional, UNDELAND, I, additional, SANDBERG, A, additional, and SOUSSI, B, additional
- Published
- 2008
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23. Methods to evaluate fish freshness in research and industry
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Olafsdóttir, G., primary, Martinsdóttir, E., additional, Oehlenschläger, J., additional, Dalgaard, P., additional, Jensen, B., additional, Undeland, I., additional, Mackie, I.M., additional, Henehan, G., additional, Nielsen, J., additional, and Nilsen, H., additional
- Published
- 1997
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24. Comparison between methods using low-toxicity solvents for the extraction of lipids from herring (Clupea harengus)
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Undeland, I., Haerroed, M., and Lingnert, H.
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- 1998
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25. Fatty acid profiling of European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) flesh as a means of authenticating production origin?
- Author
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PIRINI, MAURIZIO, REMONDINI, DANIEL, TRENTINI, MASSIMO, ROTOLO, MAGDA, BADIANI, ANNA, TESTI, SILVIA, Brandolini D., UNDELAND I., BØRRESEN T., GREEN D.P., LEROI F., LUTEN J., MEDINA I., Pirini M., Brandolini D., Remondini D., Trentini M., Rotolo M., Badiani A., and Testi S.
- Subjects
TRACEABILITY ,EUROPEAN SEABASS ,DICENTRARCHUS LABRAX ,FATTY ACID PROFILE ,AUTHENTICATION - Abstract
Seafood traceability and labelling as imposed by EU Regulation No 2065/2001 (REG in the following) requires that, in addition to commercial designation, both fishery and aquacultured products be qualified as to production method and either catch or farming area. This information is all the more crucial when it comes to widely appreciated species, such as European seabass, which may be available in a wild state or derive from aquaculture, retaining quite a different intrinsic value in the consumers’ opinions and therefore commanding widely different prices. A large study was therefore funded by the Italian Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies to test the usefulness of several analytical methods, taken either alone or in combination, to authenticate European seabass origin, the part reported here exploring the possibility to confirm product label specifications based solely on the fatty acid profile of flesh total lipids. A total of 160 European seabass specimens were collected from November 2009 to December 2010. Aquacultured specimens (n=115) were obtained from 13 farms (Italy 8, Greece 2, Turkey 2, Croatia 1), one of the Italian farms adopting quite a typical extensive production system in brackish lagoons named “vallicoltura”, the others predominantly the floating cage intensive system. Wild specimens (n=45) were obtained from 5 main areas for seabass sourcing in Italy, 4 of which in the Mediterranean sea. Fish were received on ice and promptly filleted, skinned and deboned. Total lipids were extracted (chloroform/methanol 1:1, v/v) from the homogenised flesh of each specimen and fatty acid methyl esters were separated on 30-m DB-23 capillary column. Supervised methods (quadratic discriminant analysis with leave-one-out crossvalidation) were performed on the identified fatty acid data set (22/specimen). As to the “production method” (REG, Article 4), multivariate statistics allowed the correct classification of specimens according to their farmed or wild status, with the only exception of those deriving from Italian “vallicoltura” (n=10). As to the “catch area” (REG, Article 5), about 70% of the wild specimens was allocated to their proper FAO fishing area, whereas around 85% of the Italian product was properly differentiated within the intensive farmed group.
- Published
- 2011
26. Selenium response to diverse household cooking methods as applied to 15 species of finfish and shellfish caught in the Mediterranean sea
- Author
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Orletti R., Rocchegiani E., Tarsi L., GUERRIERI, ALFONSINA, SILVI, MARINA, TESTI, SILVIA, BADIANI, ANNA, UNDELAND I., BØRRESEN T., GREEN D.P., LEROI F., LUTEN J., MEDINA I., Orletti R., Rocchegiani E., Guerrieri A., Silvi M., Tarsi L., Testi S., and Badiani A.
- Subjects
animal structures ,TRUE RETENTION ,SELENIUM ,food and beverages ,SHELLFISH ,COOKING METHOD ,FINFISH - Abstract
Total selenium contents were determined in the edible portion of several species of blueback fish (European anchovy, European pilchard, sprat, horse mackerel), whitefish (European hake, common sole, red mullet, flathead grey mullet, tub gurnard), molluscs (cuttlefish, Mediterranean mussel, Manila clam, striped venus clam) and crustaceans (caramote prawn, mantis shrimp). Within each species, specimens were analysed both at the raw state and cooked by the most appropriate technique [selected among the following: oven roasting in a partially covered tin (ORO), pan frying (PAF), cooking in parchment (PAR), cooking in a covered non-stick pan (CNS), pressure cooking (PRE), steam cooking (STM)], to gain knowledge about selenium true retention values. Several considerations prompted and justified this study at the same time: the essentiality of selenium, the medium-to-high level of this element known to be present in raw seafood, the attention recently focused on the influence exerted by processing (cooking in particular) on such issues as selenium bioavailability and speciation, the variety of culinary approaches to finfish and shellfish which have been fine-tuned in centuries in the Mediterranean countries and possibly bears on selenium retention. From October to May, 2-to-5 batches per season were collected for each species, the number of specimens per batch depending on their average size and merceological nature. A species-specific procedure was devised in order to have a representative raw reference for each cooked sample. Within species and batch, both raw and cooked flesh were microwave digested and analysed in duplicate by ICP-MS for total selenium content. True retention values (TRVs) of selenium were determined for each species within its own cooking procedure and cooking yield. Season of catch effect was significant for two-thirds of finfish species and for mantis shrimp only among shellfish, the lower levels being in Autumn. Upon cooking, selenium content increased significantly with the exception of PRE cuttlefish, CNS mussel and CNS Manila clam. The richest sources of selenium were ORO pilchard within blueback fish, ORO tub gurnard and ORO red mullet within whitefish, CNS mussel within molluscs and PAF mantis shrimp within crustaceans. When comparing cooking methods as to the selenium TRVs (%) they generated, significant differences did emerge, the average being 106a, 103a, 100a, 95.1ab, 83.9b, and 46.6c, for ORO, PAF, PAR, STM, CNS, and PRE, respectively.
- Published
- 2011
27. Multi-elemental analysis by Inductively Coupled Plasma - Atomic Emission Spectroscopy (ICP-AES) of European seabass (Dicentrarchus labrax) from several sources
- Author
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SILVI, MARINA, GUERRIERI, ALFONSINA, REMONDINI, DANIEL, TRENTINI, MASSIMO, ROTOLO, MAGDA, TESTI, SILVIA, PIRINI, MAURIZIO, BADIANI, ANNA, UNDELAND I., BØRRESEN T., GREEN D.P., LEROI F., LUTEN J., MEDINA I., Silvi M., Guerrieri A., Remondini D., Trentini M., Rotolo M., Testi S., Pirini M., and Badiani A.
- Subjects
MULTI-ELEMENTAL PROFILE ,TRACEABILITY ,EUROPEAN SEABASS ,DICENTRARCHUS LABRAX ,AUTHENTICATION - Abstract
A large study centred on the authentication of origin (lato sensu) of European seabass and funded by the Italian Ministry of Agricultural, Food and Forestry Policies was set up with the aim of identifying the most cost-effective assemblage of analytical methods towards product authentication. The discriminatory power of each of those methods, when taken alone, was also assessed at an intermediate stage of the project. The part reported here explores the possibility of correctly identifying European seabass sources based exclusively on flesh multi-elemental analysis by ICP-AES. A total of 160 European seabass specimens were collected from 18 sources in the period November 2009 - December 2010. Aquacultured specimens (n = 115) were obtained from 13 farms (Italy 8, Greece 2, Turkey 2, Croatia 1), one of the Italian farms adopting quite a typical extensive production system in brackish lagoons named “vallicoltura”, the others predominantly the floating cage intensive system. Wild specimens (n = 45) were obtained from 5 main areas for seabass sourcing in Italy, 4 of which in the Mediterranean sea. Fish were received on ice and promptly filleted, skinned and deboned. The homogenised flesh samples, once microwave-digested, were individually analysed for six macro (Ca, K, Mg, Na, P, S) and twelve trace elements (As, Cd, Co, Cr, Cu, Fe, Hg, Mn, Ni, Pb, Se, Zn) by ICP-AES. Supervised methods (quadratic discriminant analysis with leave-one-out crossvalidation) were performed on the whole data set, partial results from an exploratory round of statistical analyses being reported here. At this first attempt, elemental fingerprinting seemed not to be able to fully discriminate among the 18 European seabass sources. Slightly less than 40% of all the specimens was allocated to its own source (n = 63, 84% of which had been collected during the Autumn and Winter months). Slightly more than 62% of the wild specimens (28 out of 45) was allocated to the proper FAO fishing area. Significant differences between wild (W) and farmed (F) specimens were found in the content of K (W/F = 0.9625), Na (1.1272), P (0.9476), Cu (0.8680), Mn (0.8692), Se (1.2212), Zn (0.9378).
- Published
- 2011
28. A new method for protein extraction from sea lettuce (Ulva fenestrata) via surfactants and alkaline aqueous solutions.
- Author
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Trigo JP, Steinhagen S, Stedt K, Krona A, Verhagen S, Pavia H, Abdollahi M, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Ulva chemistry, Plant Proteins chemistry, Plant Proteins isolation & purification, Surface-Active Agents chemistry
- Abstract
Alternative protein sources such as seaweed can help relieve the pressure on land-based protein supply. This proof-of-concept study developed an extraction method to recover soluble and lipophilic proteins from the seaweed Ulva fenestrata. The method consisted of processing U. fenestrata with 0.1-0.5 % aqueous Triton X-114 solution and reprocessing the pellet with an alkaline aqueous solution. Then, the solubilized proteins were precipitated via acidification. The new method extracted 3.4-times more protein, measured as total amino acids, compared to the control with two alkaline aqueous extraction cycles. Triton disrupted the chloroplasts and likely solubilized lipophilic membrane proteins as supported by microstructure and polypeptide pattern analysis. Triton-derived protein extracts contained lipids inside the precipitates/aggregates and were richer in fatty acids typical of photosynthetic membranes. The higher extraction yields are proposed to result from membrane charge neutralization upon acidification, triggering interactions between the membrane lipids and their subsequent precipitation with the lipophilic membrane protein., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: João P. Trigo, Ingrid Undeland, and Mehdi Abdollahi have a patent pending to Chalmers Ventures AB as a result of the work described in this article. If there are other authors, they declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2025
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29. Role of lingonberry press cake in producing stable herring protein isolates via pH-shift processing: A dose response study.
- Author
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Zhang J, Hong B, Abdollahi M, Wu H, and Undeland I
- Abstract
The effects of cross-processing lingonberry press cake (LPC) (2.5-30 %, dw/dw) with herring co-products on protein yield, oxidative stability and color of pH-shift-produced protein isolates were investigated. Even at 2.5 % LPC, the formation of volatile oxidation-derived aldehydes, including hexanal, (E)-2-hexenal, heptanal, octanal, and 2,4-heptadienal, were prevented during the actual protein isolate production. Adding 10 % LPC successfully prevented formation of all these aldehydes also during eight days ice storage which was explained by the partitioning of phenolics, especially ideain (1.09 mg/g dw) and procyanidin A1 (65.5 mg/g dw), into isolates. Although higher amounts of LPC (20-30 %) further prolonged the oxidation lag phase, it reduced total protein yield, increased the consumption of acid and base, and darkened protein isolates. Therefore, it is recommended to use 10 % LPC when pH-shift-processing sensitive fish raw materials as a route to mitigate lipid oxidation and at the same time promote industrial symbiosis and more circular food production., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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30. Relationship between hemolysis and lipid oxidation in red blood cell-spiked fish muscle; dependance on pH and blood plasma.
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Ghirmai S, Krona A, Wu H, Whalin J, Axelsson M, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Animals, Plasma, Erythrocytes, Fishes, Lipids, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Hemolysis, Muscles
- Abstract
The relationship between hemolysis and lipid oxidation was explored in red blood cell (RBCs)-spiked washed cod mince (WCM). At pH 6.8 and 3 ± 1 °C, intact RBCs (71 µM Hb) delayed lipid oxidation by 1 day compared to WCM with partly or fully lysed RBCs which oxidized immediately. Intact RBCs also lowered peak peroxide value (PV) and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) with up to 59.5% and 48.1%, respectively. Adding 3% (v/w) blood plasma to RBC-spiked WCM delayed the lipid oxidation onset from 1 to 3-4 days without delaying hemolysis. At pH 6.4 the oxidation onset in RBC-WCM was the same as for pH 6.8 while at pH 7.2-7.6 lipid oxidation was suppressed for 7 days. Micrographs revealed RBC-lysis from day 2 at pH 6.4 but at pH 7.6, RBC stayed intact for ≥ 7 days. Thus, assuring presence of plasma-derived antioxidants and/or elevating muscle pH to avoid hemolysis can aid valorization of blood rich underutilized fish raw materials., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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31. Model systems for studying lipid oxidation associated with muscle foods: Methods, challenges, and prospects.
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Wu H, Tatiyaborworntham N, Hajimohammadi M, Decker EA, Richards MP, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Animals, Oxidation-Reduction, Fishes, Fatty Acids analysis, Muscles chemistry, Muscles metabolism, Meat analysis
- Abstract
Lipid oxidation is a complex process in muscle-based foods (red meat, poultry and fish) causing severe quality deterioration, e.g., off-odors, discoloration, texture defects and nutritional loss. The complexity of muscle tissue -both composition and structure- poses as a formidable challenge in directly clarifying the mechanisms of lipid oxidation in muscle-based foods. Therefore, different in vitro model systems simulating different aspects of muscle have been used to study the pathways of lipid oxidation. In this review, we discuss the principle, preparation, implementation as well as advantages and disadvantages of seven commonly-studied model systems that mimic either compositional or structural aspects of actual meat: emulsions, fatty acid micelles, liposomes, microsomes, erythrocytes, washed muscle mince, and muscle homogenates. Furthermore, we evaluate the prospects of stem cells, tissue cultures and three-dimensional printing for future model system development. Based on this reviewing of oxidation models, tailoring correct model to different study aims could be facilitated, and readers are becoming acquainted with advantages and shortcomings. In addition, insight into recent technology developments, e.g., stem cell- and tissue-cultures as well as three-dimensional printing could provide new opportunities to overcome the current bottlenecks of lipid oxidation studies in muscle.
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- 2024
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32. Oxidative Stability of Side-Streams from Cod Filleting-Effect of Antioxidant Dipping and Low-Temperature Storage.
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Sørensen AM, Wu H, Hyldig G, Bøknæs N, Mejlholm O, Undeland I, and Jacobsen C
- Subjects
- Temperature, Sodium Chloride, Rivers, Lipids, Oxidative Stress, Antioxidants pharmacology, Saline Solution
- Abstract
Currently, side-streams (e.g., head, backbone, tail, and intestines) generated in the fish processing industry often end up as low-value products for feed applications or even as waste. In order to upcycle such side-streams, they need to be preserved to avoid oxidative degradation of the lipids between the generation point and the valorization plant. In the cod filleting industry, three main solid side-streams: viscera, heads, and backbones, are obtained. Hence, this study aimed to identify the most efficient antioxidant for preserving the cod side-streams using a dipping-based strategy prior to pre-valorization storage at low temperatures (ice and frozen storage). The dipping solutions evaluated contained: (i) a lipophilic rosemary extract (0.05% and 0.2% in 0.9% NaCl), (ii) Duralox MANC (a mixture of rosemary extract, ascorbic acid, tocopherols, and citric acid; 2% in 0.9% NaCl), and (iii) NaCl (0.9%) w / w solution. One group was not dipped. No dipping and dipping in NaCl were included as controls. The results showed a positive effect of dipping with solutions containing antioxidants as measured by peroxide value (PV), TBA-reactive substances (TBARS), and sensory profiling, e.g., rancid odor. Moreover, the oxidative stability increased with decreased storage temperature. The cod side-streams were in general most efficiently preserved by Duralox MANC, followed by the lipophilic rosemary extract (0.2%), compared to no dipping and dipping in NaCl solution and the lower concentration of the lipophilic rosemary extract (0.05%). The efficiency of the antioxidant treatments was independent of the side-stream fraction and storage temperature. Thus, using antioxidant dipping combined with low temperature storage is an efficient preservation method for maintaining the quality of the lipids in cod solid side-streams during their pre-valorization storage.
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- 2023
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33. Ultrasound-aided pH-shift processing for resource-smart valorization of salmon and herring side streams.
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Santschi MV, Undeland I, and Abdollahi M
- Subjects
- Animals, Rivers, Fishes, Proteins, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Water, Lipids, Fish Proteins, Salmon
- Abstract
The possibility of reducing the amount of fresh water used during alkaline the pH-shift processing of salmon head (SH) and herring frame (HF) was evaluated with ultrasound (US) as a tool to mitigate its negative effects on protein yield. The role of water ratio and US for homogenate viscosity, mass yield, crude composition, functional properties and lipid oxidation of the SH and HF protein isolates were also investigated. Applying US during the solubilization step of the pH-shift process completely compensated for the reduced protein yield coming from using 3 rather than 6 volumes of water for HF, but not for SH. Using US had no negative effect on the composition and protein functionality of the HF protein isolate. However, it slightly increased its level of secondary lipid oxidation products. Altogether, applying US during the pH-shift processing at low water ratios can be a promising solution for more resource-smart valorization of herring side streams., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: Mehdi Abdollahi reports financial support was provided by Sweden’s Innovation Agency. Ingrid Undeland reports financial support was provided by Horizon Europe., (Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2023
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34. Effects of whole seaweed consumption on humans: current evidence from randomized-controlled intervention trials, knowledge gaps, and limitations.
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Trigo JP, Palmnäs-Bédard M, Juanola MV, and Undeland I
- Abstract
Seaweed is often recognized for its potential health benefits, attributed to its abundance of dietary fibers, protein, and polyphenols. While human observational studies have shown promise, the collective evidence from human intervention trials remains limited. This narrative review aims to comprehensively analyze the effects of seaweed intake on humans, while critically assessing the methodology, including Cochrane risk-of-bias assessment. A search was conducted in online databases, including PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar, covering the period from 2000 to May 2023. The focus was on randomized controlled clinical trials (RCTs) evaluating the impact of whole seaweed, either consumed as capsules, integrated into food products or as part of meals. Various health outcomes were examined, including appetite, anthropometric measures, cardiometabolic risk factors, thyroid function, markers of oxidative stress, and blood mineral concentrations. Out of the 25 RCTs reviewed, the findings revealed limited yet encouraging evidence for effects of seaweed on blood glucose metabolism, blood pressure, anthropometric measures, and, to a lesser extent, blood lipids. Notably, these favorable effects were predominantly observed in populations with type-2 diabetes and hypertension. Despite most trials selecting a seaweed dose aligning with estimated consumption levels in Japan, considerable variability was observed in the pretreatment and delivery methods of seaweed across studies. Moreover, most studies exhibited a moderate-to-high risk of bias, posing challenges in drawing definitive conclusions. Overall, this review highlights the necessity for well-designed RCTs with transparent reporting of methods and results. Furthermore, there is a need for RCTs to explore seaweed species cultivated outside of Asia, with a specific emphasis on green and red species. Such studies will provide robust evidence-based support for the growing utilization of seaweed as a dietary component in regions with negligible seaweed consumption, e.g., Europe., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Trigo, Palmnäs-Bédard, Juanola and Undeland.)
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- 2023
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35. Two-phase microalgae cultivation for RAS water remediation and high-value biomass production.
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Villanova V, Roques JAC, Forghani B, Shaikh KM, Undeland I, and Spetea C
- Abstract
The overall goal of this study was to provide solutions to innovative microalgae-based technology for wastewater remediation in a cold-water recirculating marine aquaculture system (RAS). This is based on the novel concept of integrated aquaculture systems in which fish nutrient-rich rearing water will be used for microalgae cultivation. The produced biomass can be used as fish feed, while the cleaned water can be reused, to create a highly eco-sustainable circular economy. Here, we tested three microalgae species Nannochloropis granulata ( Ng ), Phaeodactylum tricornutum ( Pt ), and Chlorella sp ( Csp ) for their ability to remove nitrogen and phosphate from the RAS wastewater and simultaneously produce high-value biomass, i.e., containing amino acids (AA), carotenoids, and polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs). A high yield and value of biomass were achieved for all species in a two-phase cultivation strategy: i) a first phase using a medium optimized for best growth (f/2 14x, control); ii) a second "stress" phase using the RAS wastewater to enhance the production of high-value metabolites. Ng and Pt performed best in terms of biomass yield (i.e., 5-6 g of dry weight, DW.L
-1 ) and efficient cleaning of the RAS wastewater from nitrite, nitrate, and phosphate (i.e., 100% removal). Csp produced about 3 g L-1 of DW and reduced efficiently only nitrate, and phosphate (i.e., about 76% and 100% removal, respectively). The biomass of all strains was rich in protein (30-40 % of DW) containing all the essential AA except Methionine. The biomass of all three species was also rich in PUFAs. Finally, all tested species are excellent sources of antioxidant carotenoids, including fucoxanthin ( Pt ), lutein ( Ng and Csp ) and β -carotene ( Csp ). All tested species in our novel two-phase cultivation strategy thus showed great potential to treat marine RAS wastewater and provide sustainable alternatives to animal and plant proteins with extra added values., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Villanova, Roques, Forghani, Shaikh, Undeland and Spetea.)- Published
- 2023
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36. Protein and Long-Chain n-3 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids Recovered from Herring Brines upon Flocculation and Flotation-A Case Study.
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Forghani B, Mihnea M, Svendsen TC, and Undeland I
- Abstract
A novel integrated process for recovery of protein-enriched biomasses from 5% presalting brines and spice brines of herring ( Clupea harengus ) was investigated by combining carrageenan- and/or acid-driven flocculation (F) plus dissolved air flotation (DAF). The F-DAF technique with carrageenan resulted in protein and lipid recoveries from 5% presalting brine of 78 and 38%, respectively. Without flocculation or with only acidification, protein and lipid recoveries in DAF were only 13 and 10%, respectively. Low protein and lipid recoveries, 8-12 and 1.8-8.2%, respectively, were also obtained when spice brine was subjected to only acidification and DAF. The protein content in dry biomasses from 5% presalting brine and spice brine was 36-43 and 13-16%, respectively. The corresponding lipid levels were 23-31 and 9-18%, respectively, with ash levels of 11-20 and 38-45%, respectively. Biomass proteins contained ≤45% essential amino acids, and the lipids had ≤16% long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids. Freeze-dried spice brine biomasses were characterized by anchovy- and spice-related sensory attributes. 5% presalting brine biomasses were connected to fish and seafood attributes and showed gel forming capacity. The outlined F-DAF recovery system can thus recover both nutrients and interesting flavors from the herring process waters, which are currently lost from the food chain., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)
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- 2023
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37. Mild blanching prior to pH-shift processing of Saccharina latissima retains protein extraction yields and amino acid levels of extracts while minimizing iodine content.
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Trigo JP, Stedt K, Schmidt AEM, Kollander B, Edlund U, Nylund G, Pavia H, Abdollahi M, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Amino Acids, Renal Dialysis, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Iodine, Phaeophyceae
- Abstract
The seaweed Saccharina latissima is often blanched to lower iodine levels, however, it is not known how blanching affects protein extraction. We assessed the effect of blanching or soaking (80/45/12 °C, 2 min) on protein yield and protein extract characteristics after pH-shift processing of S. latissima. Average protein yields and extract amino acid levels ranked treatments as follows: blanching-45 °C ∼ control > soaking ∼ blanching-80 °C. Although blanching-45 °C decreased protein solubilization yield at pH 12, it increased isoelectric protein precipitation yield at pH 2 (p < 0.05). The former could be explained by a higher ratio of large peptides/proteins in the blanched biomass as shown by HP-SEC, whereas the latter by blanching-induced lowering of ionic strength, as verified by a dialysis model. Moreover, blanching-45 °C yielded a protein extract with 49 % less iodine compared with the control extract. We recommend blanching-45 °C since it is effective at removing iodine and does not compromise total protein extraction yield., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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38. Structural and functional properties of collagen isolated from lumpfish and starfish using isoelectric precipitation vs salting out.
- Author
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Vate NK, Strachowski P, Undeland I, and Abdollahi M
- Abstract
The possibility of replacing the very time and resource demanding salting out (SO) method with isoelectric precipitation (IP) during collagen extraction from common starfish and lumpfish was investigated. The effect of IP on yield, structural and functional properties of the collagens was therefore compared with SO. Application of IP resulted in a higher or similar collagen mass yield compared with SO from starfish and lumpfish, respectively. However, the purity of collagens recovered with IP was lower than those recovered with SO. Replacing SO with IP did not affect polypeptide pattern and tropohelical structural integrity of collagen from the two resources as revealed with SDS-PAGE and FTIR analysis. Thermal stability and fibril formation capacity of collagens recovered with IP were also well preserved. Overall, the results showed that the IP can be a promising resource smart alternative for the classic SO precipitation during collagen extraction from marine resources., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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39. Pilot-Scale Antioxidant Dipping of Herring ( Clupea harengus ) Co-products to Allow Their Upgrading to a High-Quality Mince for Food Production.
- Author
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Wu H, Axelsson J, Kuhlin M, Fristedt R, and Undeland I
- Abstract
To enable production of high-quality mince from herring backbones, a scalable antioxidant strategy is needed due to the high susceptibility of herring muscle to lipid oxidation. We here measured the stabilizing effect of lab-/pilot-scale predipping of herring backbones (30-500 kg) in antioxidant solutions prior to production of mechanically separated mince (MSM). The antioxidants were (i) Duralox MANC, a mixture of rosemary extract, ascorbic acid, α-tocopherol, and citric acid, and (ii) rosemary extract with or without isoascorbic acid. Delivery of the key rosemary-derived antioxidant components carnosol and carnosic acid was monitored during the dipping process and ice/frozen storage. Predipping in 2% Duralox MANC gave MSM with 26.7-31.7 mg/kg carnosol + carnosic acid and extended the oxidation lag phase from <1 to 12 days during ice storage and from <1 to 6 months during frozen storage compared to control. Dipping in 0.2% rosemary extract with or without 0.5% isoascorbic acid solution gave MSM with 20.6-28.2 mg/kg carnosol + carnosic acid and extended the lag phase to 6 days and 9 months during ice and frozen storage, respectively. Our results confirmed, in pilot scale, that predipping herring coproducts in antioxidant solutions is a promising strategy to utilize these raw materials for, e.g., mince and burger production rather than for low value products as fish meal., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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40. Liquid Side Streams from Mussel and Herring Processing as Sources of Potential Income.
- Author
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Forghani B, Sørensen AM, Sloth JJ, and Undeland I
- Abstract
The seafood industry generates significant amounts of process waters which can generate value upon recovery of their nutrients. Process waters from the herring marination chain and cooking of mussels were here characterized in terms of crude composition, volatile compounds, and nutritional and potentially toxic elements. Protein and total fatty acid contents of herring refrigerated sea water (RSW) reached 3 and 0.14 g/L, respectively, while herring presalting brine (13%) reached 16.3 g/L protein and 0.77 g/L total fatty acid. Among three herring marination brines vinegar brine (VMB), spice brine (SPB), and salt brine (SMB), SPB reached the highest protein (39 g/L) and fatty acids (3.0 g/L), whereas SMB and VMB at the most had 14 and 21 g protein/L, respectively, and 0.6 and 9.9 g fatty acids/L, respectively. Essential amino acid (EAA) in marination brines accounted for up to 59% of total amino acid (TAA). From mussel processing, cooking juice had more protein (14-23 g/L) than the rest of the process waters, and in all water types, EAA reached up to 42% of TAA. For all process waters, the most abundant nutritional elements were Na, K, P, Ca, and Se. The content of all potentially toxic elements was mostly below LOD, except for As which ranged from 0.07 to 1.07 mg/kg among all tested waters. Our findings shed light on liquid seafood side streams as untapped resources of nutrients which can be valorized into food/feed products., Competing Interests: The authors declare no competing financial interest., (© 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.)
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- 2023
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41. Lingonberry ( Vaccinium vitis-idaea ) press-cake as a new processing aid during isolation of protein from herring ( Clupea harengus ) co-products.
- Author
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Zhang J, Abdollahi M, Ström A, and Undeland I
- Abstract
High acid-consumption and lipid oxidation are challenges when recovering functional proteins from herring co-products via pH-shift-processing. Here, lingonberry press-cake (LP), which is abundant in organic acids and phenolics, was added to alkali-solubilized herring- co -product-proteins (2.5-30 % LP per dry weight) aiming to aid protein precipitation, save hydrochloric acid (HCl) and provide oxidative stability. The results revealed 5-30 % LP addition reduced HCl-consumption by 13-61 % and 19-79 % when precipitating proteins at pH 5.5 and 6.5, respectively. Higher LP% decreased protein content and lightness of protein isolates but raised the lipid content. Precipitation at pH 6.5 used less acid, reduced total protein yield and raised moisture content and darkness of isolates. Contrary to controls, lipid oxidation-derived volatiles did not develop in protein isolates precipitated with 10 % and 30 % LP, neither during the process itself nor during 21 days on ice. Altogether, LP was identified as a promising all-natural processing-aid to use during herring protein isolation., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2023 The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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42. Radial discharge high shear homogenization and ultrasonication assisted pH-shift processing of herring co-products with antioxidant-rich materials for maximum protein yield and functionality.
- Author
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Zhang J, Ström A, Bordes R, Alminger M, Undeland I, and Abdollahi M
- Subjects
- Animals, Fishes metabolism, Food Handling, Humans, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Lipids, Water metabolism, Antioxidants metabolism, Patient Discharge
- Abstract
Cross-processing herring co-products with antioxidant-rich helpers including lingonberry-press-cake, shrimp-shells and seaweed was reported to mitigate lipid oxidation but reduce protein yield. Here, four strategies were used to counteract such yield-reduction; optimizing solubilization/precipitation pH, increasing raw-material-to-water-ratio, replacing single-stage-toothed- by radial-discharge- high-shear-mechanical-homogenization (RD-HSMH) and ultrasonication (US). The effects of RD-HSMH and US on lipid oxidation, protein structural and functional properties were studied. Combining four strategies improved total protein yield by 5-12 %, depending on helper type. More than the confirmed antioxidant effects, cross-processing also improved protein water solubility and emulsification activity but reduced gelation properties. RD-HSMH generally improved protein emulsifying and gelation properties but reduced protein water solubility. US reduced protein water solubility and gelation properties. Altogether, it was recommended for all helpers to increase solubilization pH to 12 and raw-material-to-water-ratio to 1:6 followed by RD-HSMH at 8000 rpm for 90 s, aiming for maximum protein yield and emulsifying and gelation properties., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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43. Physicochemical and functional properties of protein isolated from herring co-products; effects of catching season, pre-sorting, and co-product combination.
- Author
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van Berlo E, Undeland I, and Abdollahi M
- Subjects
- Animals, Hydrogen-Ion Concentration, Lipids, Seasons, Fish Proteins chemistry, Fishes
- Abstract
Effect of catching season (spring vs fall), pre-sorting and selective recombination of different herring filleting co-products on protein yield during valorisation using the alkaline pH-shift technology was studied. Impacts of the pre-processing conditions on lipid oxidation, rheological, structural and functional properties of the proteins were also investigated. The sorted frame fraction resulted in the highest protein yield, myosin content, gel-forming capacity and gel whiteness. pH-shift processing triggered severe proteolytic degradation and lipid oxidation in the head fraction imposing a low-quality protein isolate. The unsorted co-products and the combinations head + frame and head + frame + tail gave protein isolates with gelation and oxidative quality being better than head but below the isolate from frame alone. The spring co-products produced protein isolates with better overall quality than the fall co-products. Altogether, the results revealed the advantage of sorting herring co-products, and the influence of season on protein extraction from herring co-products., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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44. Pro-oxidative activity of trout and bovine hemoglobin during digestion using a static in vitro gastrointestinal model.
- Author
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Wu H, Tullberg C, Ghirmai S, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Animals, Digestion, Malondialdehyde metabolism, Mammals, Oxidation-Reduction, Oxidative Stress, Hemoglobins metabolism, Trout metabolism
- Abstract
The degradation of trout and bovine hemoglobin (Hb) and their pro-oxidant activities in washed cod muscle mince (WCM) were studied using simple pH-shifts to simulate gastrointestinal (GI) conditions (pH 7 → 6 → 3 → 7), as well as full static in vitro GI digestion. Following gastric acidification to pH 6, metHb formation increased, especially for trout Hb. Subsequent acidification to pH 3 promoted Hb unfolding and partial or complete heme group-loss. During full GI digestion, polypeptide/peptide analyses revealed more extensive Hb-degradation in the gastric than duodenal phase, without any species-differences. When digesting WCM +/-Hb, both Hbs strongly promoted malondialdehyde (MDA), 4-hydroxy-2-hexenal (HHE), and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) formation, peaking at the end of the gastric phase. Trout-Hb stimulated MDA and HHE more than bovine Hb in the first gastric phase. Altogether, partially degraded Hb, and/or free hemin -both mammal and fish-derived- stimulated oxidation of PUFA-rich lipids under GI-conditions, especially gastric ones., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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45. Resource efficient collagen extraction from common starfish with the aid of high shear mechanical homogenization and ultrasound.
- Author
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Vate NK, Undeland I, and Abdollahi M
- Subjects
- Alkalies, Animals, Collagen chemistry, Starfish
- Abstract
Processes currently used for collagen extraction are complicated requiring a great deal of time and chemicals. Here, high shear mechanical homogenization (HSMH) and ultrasound (US) were integrated in the pretreatment step of collagen extraction from common starfish to reduce chemical use and time consumption. Effects of the assistant technologies on yield, structural integrity and functionality of collagen were also investigated. HSMH reduced the deproteinization time from 6 h to 5 min and its required amount of alkali 4 times, compared with classic methods. HSMH + US reduced the demineralization time from 24 h to 12 h and improved its efficiency in extraction of minerals. Collagen extraction with HSMH and HSMH + US resulted in similar yield as the classic method and did not affect triple helical structural integrity, polypeptide pattern, thermal stability or fibril-formation capacity of the collagens. Altogether, HSMH and US can effectively improve resource efficiency during collagen extraction without imposing negative effect on collagen quality., (Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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46. Five cuts from herring ( Clupea harengus ): Comparison of nutritional and chemical composition between co-product fractions and fillets.
- Author
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Wu H, Forghani B, Abdollahi M, and Undeland I
- Abstract
Weight distribution, proximate composition, fatty acids, amino acids, minerals and vitamins were investigated in five sorted cuts (head, backbone, viscera + belly flap, tail, fillet) emerging during filleting of spring and fall herring ( Clupea harengus ). The herring co-product cuts constituted ∼ 60 % of the whole herring weight, with backbone and head dominating. Substantial amounts of lipids (5.8-17.6 % wet weight, ww) and proteins (12.8-19.2 % ww) were identified in the co-products, the former being higher in fall than in spring samples. Co-product cuts contained up to 43.1 % long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC n-3 PUFA) of total FA, absolute levels peaking in viscera + belly flap. All cuts contained high levels of essential amino acids (up to 43.3 %), nutritional minerals (e.g., iodine, selenium, calcium, and iron/heme-iron), and vitamins E, D, and B12. Co-products were, in many cases, more nutrient-rich than the fillet and could be excellent sources for both (functional) food and nutraceuticals., Competing Interests: The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (© 2022 The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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47. Exploring how plasma- and muscle-related parameters affect trout hemolysis as a route to prevent hemoglobin-mediated lipid oxidation of fish muscle.
- Author
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Ghirmai S, Wu H, Axelsson M, Matsuhira T, Sakai H, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Animals, Erythrocytes, Fatty Acids, Unsaturated pharmacology, Hemin pharmacology, Hemoglobins pharmacology, Membrane Lipids pharmacology, Muscles, Hemolysis, Oncorhynchus mykiss
- Abstract
Hemoglobin (Hb) is a powerful promoter of lipid oxidation, particularly in muscle of small pelagic fish species and fish by-products, both having high Hb-levels and highly unsaturated lipids. As Hb is located within the red blood cells (RBCs) it is here hypothesized that the perishable polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) can be protected from oxidation by limiting hemolysis during early fish processing. Using a model system consisting of washed-resuspended trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) RBCs (wr-RBCs), the aim of this study was to evaluate how RBC lysis under cold storage was affected by selected parameters linked to blood or muscle: bacterial growth, energy status, pH, RBC membrane lipid oxidation and colloidal osmotic pressure (COP). The results indicated that bacterial growth had a modest effect on hemolysis while pH-values typical for post mortem fish muscle (6.4-6.8), and absence of glucose or albumin stimulated hemolysis. The rapid hemolysis observed at pH 6.4-6.8 correlated with lipid oxidation of the RBC membrane, while the lower hemolysis at pH 7.2-8.0 occurred with low, or without any RBC membrane lipid oxidation. When hemin was added to the RBCs at pH 6.8 hemolysis was induced without parallel RBC membrane oxidation, pointing at Hb-autoxidation and hemin-release per se as important events triggering lysis in fish muscle. Altogether, the study provided valuable findings which ultimately can aid development of new tools to combat lipid oxidation in post mortem fish muscle by limiting hemolysis., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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48. Lower Non-Heme Iron Absorption in Healthy Females from Single Meals with Texturized Fava Bean Protein Compared to Beef and Cod Protein Meals: Two Single-Blinded Randomized Trials.
- Author
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Mayer Labba IC, Hoppe M, Gramatkovski E, Hjellström M, Abdollahi M, Undeland I, Hulthén L, and Sandberg AS
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Animals, Biological Availability, Cattle, Female, Humans, Intestinal Absorption, Iron metabolism, Meals, Middle Aged, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Young Adult, Fabaceae, Vicia faba metabolism
- Abstract
Meat analogs based on plant protein extracts are rising in popularity as meat consumption declines. A dietary shift away from meat, which has a high iron bioavailability, may have a negative effect on the amount of iron absorbed from the diet. Iron absorption from legumes cultivated in regions not suitable for soy production, such as fava bean, has not yet been explored. The aim of this study was to evaluate non-heme iron absorption from a meal with texturized fava bean protein compared to beef and cod protein meals. The study included two single-blinded iron isotope trials in healthy Swedish women of the ages 18-45 years, each of whom served as their own control. The participants were served matched test meals containing beef and fava bean protein (Study 1) or cod and fava bean protein (Study 2) with radiolabeled non-heme iron
55 Fe and59 Fe. The absorption of non-heme iron from test meals was measured by whole-body counting and erythrocyte incorporation. The absorption of non-heme iron, measured as erythrocyte incorporation ratio, from beef protein meal was 4.2 times higher compared to texturized fava bean meal, and absorption from cod protein meal was 2.7 times higher compared to the fava bean meal. The adjusted non-heme iron absorption, normalized to a 40% reference dose uptake, was 9.2% for cod protein meal, 21.7% for beef protein meal, and 4.2% for texturized fava bean meal. A fava bean protein meal has markedly lower iron bioavailability in healthy females compared with a meal of beef or cod protein. Therefore, a dietary shift from meat and fish protein to fava bean protein may increase the risk of iron deficiency.- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Cross-processing herring and salmon co-products with agricultural and marine side-streams or seaweeds produces protein isolates more stable towards lipid oxidation.
- Author
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Zhang J, Abdollahi M, Alminger M, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Animals, Anthocyanins, Lipids, Oxidation-Reduction, Rivers, Salmon, Seaweed
- Abstract
Herring and salmon filleting co-products were pH-shift processed together with seven antioxidant-containing raw materials ("helpers") including lingonberry-, apple-, oat-, barley- and shrimp-co-products, and two seaweeds (Saccharina latissima, Ulva fenestrata) to produce protein isolates stable towards lipid oxidation. Malondialdehyde (MDA) and 4-hydroxy-(E)-2-hexenal (HHE) levels revealed that all helpers, except shrimp shells, to different extents retarded lipid oxidation both during pH-shift-processing and ice storage. The three helpers performing best were: lingonberry press-cake > apple pomace ∼ Ulva. Color of protein isolates was affected by helper-derived pigments (e.g., anthocyanins, carotenoids, chlorophyll) and lipid oxidation-induced changes (e.g., metHb-formation, pigment-bleaching). In conclusion, combining fish co-products with other food side-streams or seaweeds during pH-shift processing appears a promising new tool to minimize lipid oxidation of protein isolates, both during their production and subsequent storage. Lingonberry press-cake was the most efficient helper but provided dark color which may narrow product development possibilities, something which requires further attention., (Copyright © 2022 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Lipid oxidation in sorted herring (Clupea harengus) filleting co-products from two seasons and its relationship to composition.
- Author
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Wu H, Forghani B, Abdollahi M, and Undeland I
- Subjects
- Animals, Antioxidants, Lipids, Seasons, Fishes, Seafood analysis
- Abstract
Lipid oxidation in ice-stored sorted herring fractions (head, backbone, viscera + belly flap, tail, fillet) from spring and fall, and its association with endogenous prooxidants, antioxidants and lipid substrates were investigated. Peroxide value (PV) and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS) had increased significantly in all fractions after 1 day, but for both seasons, the most rapid PV and TBARS development occurred in head, which also had highest hemoglobin (Hb) levels and lipoxygenases (LOX) activity. Viscera + belly flap was overall the most stable part, and also had the highest α-tocopherol content. Pearson correlation analyses across all five fractions confirmed a significant impact of Hb, LOX and α-tocopherol on the lipid oxidation susceptibility, while content of total iron, copper, lipids or polyunsaturated fatty acids provided no significant correlation. Overall, the study showed which pro-oxidants that should be inhibited or removed to succeed with value adding of herring filleting co-products and the fillet itself., (Copyright © 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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