The Use of Plant Fibers for Oligosaccharide Production with Libraries Constructed by Combinatorial Enzyme Technology
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Published:2021-09
Issue:3
Volume:10
Page:168-177
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ISSN:2211-5501
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Container-title:Current Biotechnology
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language:en
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Short-container-title:CBIOT
Affiliation:
1. Western Regional Research Center, USDA-ARS, Albany, CA 94706, USA
Abstract
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Combinatorial chemistry involves the chemical or biological synthesis of libraries of the
diverse structural population of a template molecule and the screening for the variants expressing
desirable target properties. The approach has been a focus of research activity in modern drug discovery
and biotechnology for accelerating the discovery and development of novel therapeutic and
bioactive compounds. This review describes the application of combinatorial chemistry in enzyme
technology as a novel technique and invention developed in our laboratory to construct oligosaccharide
libraries in the conversion of plant fibers. The theory, mechanism, development, and
application of this combinatorial enzyme approach are presented for the first time. The potential
food and non-food uses of oligosaccharides are described. Citrus pectin and wheat insoluble fiber
have been used as substrates for combinatorial enzyme reactions. Generation of libraries of structural
variants of pectic oligosaccharides (oligoGalA) and feruloyl oligosaccharides (FOS) demonstrates
the feasibility and usefulness of the technique in the transformation of plant biomass to value-
added products.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Bioengineering,Biotechnology
Cited by
1 articles.
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