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pmid: 16769167
Enzymes are commonly used in food processing and in the production of food ingredients. Enzymes traditionally isolated from culturable microorganisms, plants, and mammalian tissues are often not well-adapted to the conditions used in modern food production methods. The use of recombinant DNA technology has made it possible to manufacture novel enzymes suitable for specific food-processing conditions. Such enzymes may be discovered by screening microorganisms sampled from diverse environments or developed by modification of known enzymes using modern methods of protein engineering or molecular evolution. As a result, several important food-processing enzymes such as amylases and lipases with properties tailored to particular food applications have become available. Another important achievement is improvement of microbial production strains. For example, several microbial strains recently developed for enzyme production have been engineered to increase enzyme yield by deleting native genes encoding extracellular proteases. Moreover, certain fungal production strains have been modified to reduce or eliminate their potential for production of toxic secondary metabolites. In this article, we discuss the safety of microorganisms used as hosts for enzyme-encoding genes, the construction of recombinant production strains, and methods of improving enzyme properties. We also briefly describe the manufacture and safety assessment of enzyme preparations and summarize options for submitting information on enzyme preparations to the US Food and Drug Administration.
Escherichia coli K12, United States Food and Drug Administration, Aspergillus oryzae, Genetic Vectors, Gene Transfer Techniques, Guidelines as Topic, Protein Engineering, Recombinant Proteins, United States, Enzymes, Industrial Microbiology, Animals, Humans, Aspergillus niger, Food-Processing Industry, alpha-Amylases, Bacillus subtilis
Escherichia coli K12, United States Food and Drug Administration, Aspergillus oryzae, Genetic Vectors, Gene Transfer Techniques, Guidelines as Topic, Protein Engineering, Recombinant Proteins, United States, Enzymes, Industrial Microbiology, Animals, Humans, Aspergillus niger, Food-Processing Industry, alpha-Amylases, Bacillus subtilis
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