Development of Aqueous Two-Phase System (ATPS) to separate crude bioactive phenolics from phanerochaete chrysosporium biomass
Abstract
Natural antioxidants demand has increased globally due to the advantages and effect in
various aspects, especially in pharmaceutical industry. Fungus Phanerochaete chrysosporium presents crude bioactive phenolics which act as antioxidant. The aim of this study was to develop an Aqueous Two Phase System (ATPS) to separate the phenolic compounds with high scavenging activity from Phanerochaete chrysosporium biomass. The main objective was to study the effect of salt concentration and pH on the partition of bioactive phenolics in
solid-liquid ATPS. The second objective was to evaluate and compare the scavenging activity
of phenolic extracted by ATPS with ascorbic acid. In order to extract the crude bioactive
phenolics from the biomass of the fungus, a low cost and effective yet harmless to the
environment ATP extraction technique was developed. The ATPS was developed by
construct a phase diagram using appropriate concentration of the two phase forming
components which in this case 80 % (w/w) of ethanol and 40 % (w/w) of K2HPO4. From the
biphasic region indicated in the phase diagram, several points which give different
composition of the components were selected to be test on the partition coefficient and
recovery. The analytical result of total phenolic contents using Gallic acid as the standard was
expressed in K and Rv. The best K (8.19) and Rv (97.81 %) was achieved by top phase of
ATPS consisted of 50 % (w/v) ethanol and 20 % (w/v) K2HPO4 with 30 % (v/v) distilled
water and 28 mg of biomass at pH 9.59. The capability of the phenolics in scavenging
activity was tested by DPPH and the result was 81.77 % which considered high compared to
the synthetic Ascorbic acid.