Keratin is a high-sulphur content protein, highly abundant in nature since it is the major component of feathers, hair, wool, horns and nails. In recent years, keratin-based materials have received great consideration due to its unique features in terms of ability to absorb heavy metals and other toxic compounds, thus resulting particularly useful forwater and air purification. Moreover, due to its intrinsic efficacy in promoting cells growth, along with its ability to encapsulate both hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs, keratin has been increasingly studied for the preparation of a wide range of bio-medical devices, especially in the field of tissue engineering and controlled drug delivery. Extraction of keratin from low-cost biomasses deriving from food industry by-products (especially slaughterhouse, dairy and poultry industry) is a challenging process hampered by the presence of a high content of disulphide bonds that bestowthe proteinwith high resistance to chemical, enzymatic and thermal treatments. Thus, the large-scale use of keratin strongly depends on the development of cost-effective and time-efficient extraction methods. This chapter gives an overview on the availability of different keratinous biomasses and examines the various extraction methods proposed in the literature, underlining their advantages and limitations. Moreover, a detailed comparison between the chemical-physical properties of keratins obtained from different biomasses is here reported.

Extraction and Characterization of Keratin from Different Biomasses

Claudia Vineis;Alessio Varesano;Greta Varchi;Annalisa Aluigi
2019

Abstract

Keratin is a high-sulphur content protein, highly abundant in nature since it is the major component of feathers, hair, wool, horns and nails. In recent years, keratin-based materials have received great consideration due to its unique features in terms of ability to absorb heavy metals and other toxic compounds, thus resulting particularly useful forwater and air purification. Moreover, due to its intrinsic efficacy in promoting cells growth, along with its ability to encapsulate both hydrophobic and hydrophilic drugs, keratin has been increasingly studied for the preparation of a wide range of bio-medical devices, especially in the field of tissue engineering and controlled drug delivery. Extraction of keratin from low-cost biomasses deriving from food industry by-products (especially slaughterhouse, dairy and poultry industry) is a challenging process hampered by the presence of a high content of disulphide bonds that bestowthe proteinwith high resistance to chemical, enzymatic and thermal treatments. Thus, the large-scale use of keratin strongly depends on the development of cost-effective and time-efficient extraction methods. This chapter gives an overview on the availability of different keratinous biomasses and examines the various extraction methods proposed in the literature, underlining their advantages and limitations. Moreover, a detailed comparison between the chemical-physical properties of keratins obtained from different biomasses is here reported.
2019
Istituto per la Sintesi Organica e la Fotoreattivita' - ISOF
Istituto per lo Studio delle Macromolecole - ISMAC - Sede Milano
978-3-030-02900-5
Keratin
Wool
Feather
Hair
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/353891
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