Response surface methodology to supercritical carbon dioxide extraction of astaxanthin from Haematococcus pluvialis.

Experimental design was used to investigate the effect of operating temperature (40-80 degrees C), operating pressure (30-50 MPa), and extraction time (1-4h) of supercritical carbon dioxide (SC-CO2) extraction on astaxanthin yields and the extract antioxidant activity (IC50). The ranges of the factors investigated were 40-80 degrees C for the operating temperature (X1), 30-50 MPa for the operating pressure (X2), and 1-4h for the extraction time (X3). The statistical analysis of the experiment indicated that pressure, extraction time, and the interaction between temperature and pressure (X1X2) had significant effect on astaxanthin yields. The central composite design showed that polynomial regression models were in good agreement with the experimental results with the coefficients of determination of 0.924 and 0.846 for astaxanthin yield and antioxidant activity, respectively. The optimal condition for astaxanthin yield within the experimental range of the variables studied was at 70 degrees C, 50 MPa, and 4h. At this condition, the predicted amount of astaxanthin extracted was 23.04 mg/g (2.3 wt% or 83.78% recovery). For the effect of experimental extraction conditions on antioxidant activity, IC50 was used as an index, which is the concentration that gives a 50% reduction in the absorbance of the ABTS free radical. The analysis of the results showed that the interaction between the operating temperature and operating pressure (X1X2) was the only significant factor affecting the extract antioxidant activity. The statistical model gave the minimum point for antioxidant activity at 67 degrees C, 40.3 MPa, and 1.86 h of extraction, at which the value for 1/IC50 was 0.39 l/mg (or IC50 was 2.57 mg/l).

[1]  J. Bayona,et al.  Combined experimental design and information theory for the optimization of supercritical fluid extraction of organic priority pollutants from sediment , 1997 .

[2]  W. Argüelles-Monal,et al.  SUPERCRITICAL CO2/ETHANOL EXTRACTION OF ASTAXANTHIN FROM BLUE CRAB (CALLINECTES SAPIDUS) SHELL WASTE , 2001 .

[3]  Peter L. Douglas,et al.  Supercritical CO2 extraction of nimbin from neem seeds – an experimental study , 2001 .

[4]  J. M. Park,et al.  Evaluation of Factors Promoting Astaxanthin Production by a Unicellular Green Alga, Haematococcus pluvialis, with Fractional Factorial Design , 2002, Biotechnology progress.

[5]  Miguel Valcárcel,et al.  Analytical Supercritical Fluid Extraction , 1994 .

[6]  Beatriz P. Nobre,et al.  Supercritical carbon dioxide extraction of compounds with pharmaceutical importance from microalgae , 2003 .

[7]  E. Anklam,et al.  Supercritical fluid extraction for liquid chromatographic determination of carotenoids in Spirulina Pacifica algae: a chemometric approach. , 2001, Journal of chromatography. A.

[8]  C. Rice-Evans,et al.  Antioxidant activities of carotenes and xanthophylls , 1996, FEBS letters.

[9]  M. Goto,et al.  Extraction of Astaxanthin from Haematococcus p luvialis Using Supercritical CO 2 and Ethanol as Entrainer , 2006 .

[10]  C. Rice-Evans,et al.  Antioxidant activity applying an improved ABTS radical cation decolorization assay. , 1999, Free radical biology & medicine.

[11]  E. J. Martínez de la Ossa,et al.  Supercritical fluid extraction of carotenoids and chlorophyll a from Nannochloropsis gaditana , 2005 .

[12]  Akio Kodama,et al.  Supercritical CO2 extraction of essential oils and cuticular waxes from peppermint leaves , 1996 .