Disinfected cassava root pieces were incubated with and without fungal inoculation. The resulting flours from non-inoculated incubated cassava showed significantly lower (P=O.O04) cyanogenic glucoside levels than those from non-incubated cassava, and significantly higher (P<O.OOOl) levels than those
Mechanisms of increased linamarin degradation during solid-substrate fermentation of cassava
β Scribed by A. J. A. Essers; M. H. J. Bennik; M. J. R. Nout
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1995
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 547 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1573-0972
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β¦ Synopsis
Several fungi and bacteria, isolated from Ugandan domestic fermented cassava, released HCN from linamarin in defined growth media. In 72 h, a Bacillus sp. decreased the linamarin to 1% of initial concentrations, Mucor racemosus to 7%, Rhizopus oryzae and R. stolonifer to 30%, but Neurospora sitophila and Geotrichum candidum hardly degraded the linamarin. Adding pectolytic and cellulolytic enzymes, but not linamarase, to root pieces under aseptic conditions, led to root softening and significantly lower linamarin contents. Neurospora sitophila showed no linamarase activity, in contrast to M. racemosus and Bacillus sp., both of which were less effective in root softening and decreasing the root linamarin content. The most important contribution of microorganisms to linamarin decrease in the solid-substrate fermentation of cassava is their cell-wall-degrading activity, which enhances the contact between endogenous linamarase and linamarin.
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