Silk Degumming and Utilization of Silk Sericin by Hydrolysis Using Alkaline Protease from Beauveria Sp. (MTCC 5184): A Green Approach

Conventionally, degumming is carried out at 90°C--110°C temperature by boiling the raw silk with Marseilles soap and sodium bicarbonate which eventually requires a lot of water and energy. In this study, degumming of Chinese bivoltine raw silk fibres with alkaline protease produced by Beauveria sp....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Snehal V. More, Sakalya Chavan, Asmita A. Prabhune
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2018-05-01
Series:Journal of Natural Fibers
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15440478.2017.1330718
Description
Summary:Conventionally, degumming is carried out at 90°C--110°C temperature by boiling the raw silk with Marseilles soap and sodium bicarbonate which eventually requires a lot of water and energy. In this study, degumming of Chinese bivoltine raw silk fibres with alkaline protease produced by Beauveria sp. (MTCC 5184) is studied. Complete degumming was obtained in 45 min with 75 units of enzyme per gram of silk. Degumming was found to be optimal at 50°C and pH 9.0. Scanning electron micrographs showed that the sericin deposits were removed and the obtained fibres were clean, separated, had smooth feel with shine as compared to untreated fibres. Sericin isolated from silk cocoon (by-product which goes waste) was hydrolyzed with the same alkaline protease obtained from Beauveria sp. to get small molecular weight peptides. These peptides can be utilized further for cosmetic, pharmaceutical, and various industrial applications.
ISSN:1544-0478
1544-046X