167 resultados para Seafood.


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Metabolomics has established itself as a discipline that can offer a unique point of view on how a technological treatment could impact on the charactersitics of a food. Even more, the same analytical platforms necessary for the purpose can also effectively unravel intricate interactions between such food and human health upon consumption. This PhD thesis investigates the application of metabolomics in understanding the impact of technological treatments on food and their subsequent effects on human health, utilizing 1H-NMR as the analytical platform. The study involves the development of standard operating procedures (SOPs) to ensure a fast and stable preparation of seafood samples, incorporating novel algorithms to enhance the accuracy of metabolome profiles. To gain insight on how metabolomics can allow exploring the effects of a technological treatment on a food, we performed three sets of experiments to investigate the application of metabolomics in studying the impact of high hydrostatic pressure (HHP) treatment on seafood metabolome during storage. The first experiment employs untargeted metabolomic analysis on chill-stored rose shrimp, revealing significant post-HHP treatment metabolic alterations and mechanisms. The investigation is extended to grey mullet in the second experiment, utilizing both untargeted and targeted metabolomic analyses to account for matrix-related effects. The third experiment assesses the targeted metabolome of striped prawns, showing that HHP significantly influences metabolic pathways, positively impacting freshness and taste through alterations in related metabolites. Shifting focus to the effects of food on humans, the study explores the impact of multistrain probiotics on cirrhosis patients using 1H-NMR. The platform reveals notable alterations in glutamine/glutamate metabolism, enhancing the patients' ammonia detoxification capacity. This research underscores the potential of metabolomics in uncovering intricate interactions between technological treatments, food, and human health, providing valuable insights for both the food industry and healthcare interventions.

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Plastic is an essential asset for the modern lifestyle, given its superiority as a material from the points of view of cost, processability and functional properties. However, plastic-related environmental pollution has become nowadays a very significant problem that can no longer be overlooked. For this reason, in recent decades, the research for new materials that could replace fossil fuel-based plastics has been focused on biopolymers with similar physicochemical properties to fossil fuel-based plastics, such as Polyhydroxyalkanoates (PHA). PHAs are a family of biodegradable polyesters synthesized by many microorganisms as carbon and energy reserves. PHA appears as a good candidate to substitute conventional petroleum-based plastics since it has similar properties, but with the advantage of being biobased and biodegradable, and has a wide range of applications (e.g., packaging). However, the PHA production cost is almost four times higher (€5/kg) than conventional plastic manufacturing. The PHA production by mixed microbial cultures (MMC) allows to reduce production costs as it does not require aseptic conditions and it enables the use of inexpensive by-products or waste streams as these cultures are more amenable to deal with complex feedstocks. Saline wastewaters (WWs), generated by several industries such as seafood, leather and dairy, are often rich in organic compounds and, due to a strong salt inhibition, the biological treatments are inefficient, and their disposal is expensive. These saline WWs are a potential feedstock for PHA production, as they are an inexpensive raw material. Moreover, saline WWs could allow the utilization of seawater in the process as dilution and cleaning agent, further decreasing the operational costs and the environmental burden of the process. The main goal of the current project is to assess and optimize the PHA production from a mixture of food waste and brine wastewater from the fishery industry by MMC.