Title of Invention

"A METHOD FOR THE PRODUCTION OF A RED COLORANT UTILIZING THE STRAIN OF THE MICROORGANISM PENICILLIUM OXALICUM VAR, ARMENIACA"

Abstract A method for the production of a red colorant, characterized in that cultivating the strain Penicillium oxalicum var. Armeniaca CCM 8242 at a temperature of 25 to 30 °C, at a gauge pressure of 50 to 80 kPa, in a broth of pH 3 to 9, containing carbohydrates and ammonia nitrogen, for 60 to 72 hours, and thereafter the liquid is removed from the nutrient broth and the resulting red colorant is isolated from said liquid.
Full Text The present invention relates to a method for the production of a red colorant utilizing the strain of the microorganism penicillium oxalicum var,
armeniaca.
The invention relates to a new strain of a fungus having the property to produce a red colorant which can be applied as a colorant in.the food and cosmetic industries.
Background Art
In the food and cosmetic industries there exists a need of colorants well soluble in the components of the respective products, the colour of which does not show a bathochromic effect and which is stable at boiling.
When the strain being described, belonging to the species Penicillium oxalicum, was cultivated in a broth, let it be liquid or solid, there was observed already on the second day of incubation increased synthesis of a red colorant which was released into the broth. The yield of the purified red colorant amounts to 1.5 to 2 g from 1 litre of the nutrient broth.
Disclosure of the Invention
Accordingly, there is provided a method for the production of a red colorant, characterized in that cultivating the strain Penicillium oxalicum var. Armeniaca CCM 8242 at a temperature of 25 to 30 °C, at a gauge pressure of 50 to 80 kPa, in a broth of pH 3 to 9, containing carbohydrates and ammonia nitrogen, for 60 to 72 hours, and thereafter the liquid is removed from the nutrient broth and the resulting red colorant is isolated from said liquid.
The invention consists in the strain Penicillium oxalicum var. Armeniaca CCM 8242.
The strain was deposited at the International Depositary Authority CCM - Czech Collection of Microorganisms of the Masaryk University, Tvrdeho 14, 602 00 Brno,

Czech Republic, on March 19, 1998 under the accession No. CCM 8242.
Said strain forms short conidiophores of dimensions 60 to 70 times 5 to 6 Each broomstick includes from 2 to 7 conidii. The conidii are roundshaped, of a diameter of from 15 to 20 µm, with a smooth yellow-gold surface, and they disintegrate easily during microscopic examination.
In the Czapek's mineral broth, the strain forms standardly growing colonies which achieve 2 to 2.5 cm on the third day of incubation, and up to 4,5 cm on the fifth to sixth day. The colonies are unbooked, velvet-like, the hyphae are short, sporulating, with a fragile surface and they crumble out. When shaking a vessel with a ripe culture, it is characteristic for the conidia that they drop away in bulk. No zone effect is shown. The mycelium is short, of a light green colour which changes in the course of the culture growing to a dark green colour. The white colour of the growing colony edge amounts to the width of 1 to 2 mm. The reverse side of the colony becomes red, and said red colour becomes more intensive during the growing of the culture, and it diffuses into agar, which becomes intensively coloured in a striking red colour.
In the malt agar as an organic broth, the colonies are large, with a short light mycelium coloured green. During the strain growth no biosynthesis of red colour is shown, or it is produced slightly only.
In an organic broth which is represented by a cabbage infusion-agar or a potato infusion-agar, there are formed quickly growing colonies having a diameter of 5 to 7 cm. The mycelium is fragile, green. There appears higher production of yellow-gold conidia. During the growth of the culture, the adverse side of the colony gets a red colouring and the colorant diffuses into the agar which becomes intensively dark red.
The pigmentation of the reverse side of the colony starts on the second day of the strain incubation and achieves its maximum in a seven-day culture. At the broth pH value lower than 3 and higher than 9, at a standard growth of the culture, biosynthesis of the red colorant is stopped or it is produced very slightly. The optimum pH value for producing the red colorant is 5.6 to 6.2. No odour or exudate appears.
The strain hydrolyses starch intensively, it does not dilute gelatin and it does not peptonize milk.
It absorbs organic nitrogen in the form of aminoacids asparagine, valine, serine and tyrosine.
L-(+)-maltose, L-(+)-arabinose, D-(+)-sorbitol and D-(+)-mannitol are excellent sources of saccharidic nutrition.
As to organic acids, it absorbs succinic, lactic and maleic acids.
The optimum temperature for growing fungi and for biosynthesis of the colorant is 27 to 29 °C. The production strain is also multiplied at the temperature of 37 to 38 °C, and it does not lose the property to form the pigment. The production fungus strain is kept by means of a method of periodic reinoculations in test-tubes in bunches of cabbage agarised broth in a refrigerator at the temperature of +4 to +5 °C. The reinoculation period amounts to 2 up to 3 months.
Another aspect of the invention provides a method for the production of a red colorant, wherein the above mentioned production strain is cultivated at a temperature of 25 to 30 °C, preferably at 27 to 29 °C, preferably at a gauge pressure of 50 to 80 kPa, advantageously with continuous mixing at 280 rpm, with air supplied at a ratio of 1.2 air volumes to 1.0 broth volume, in a broth of pH 3 to 9, preferably of pH 5.8 to 6.2, containing carbohydrates, preferably from 1.5 to 1.8 wt. %, and ammonia nitrogen, preferably from 0.66 to 0.69 wt. %, for 60 to 72 hours, preferably for 64 to 68 hours, and thereafter the liquid is removed from the nutrient broth and the resulting red colorant is isolated from said liquid.
The colorant is a dark red crystalline powder of a raspberry-red colour in an aqueous solution. No odour or taste appear either in the crystalline form or in the
solution.
Its melting point is 127 °C (decomposition). It is not soluble in water, it is soluble in an alkaline solution (pH 9.0 to 9.5) and in ethyl alcohol. It is well soluble in whites of eggs, in fats and in concentrated acetic acid. The colour of the colorant is not changed depending on the pH value, which means that there is no bathochromic
effect. It has a high stability as to light and resistance with respect to temperature. No change of colour takes place during boiling in solutions for 5 hours at 100 °C. It absorbs light in the visible range (Xmax = 435 mm and 502 mm). The proportion of
peaks amounts to 1.0 to 1.5.
The analytical results by mass spectroscopy in comparison with the natural red colorant E 120 standard revealed that the produced red colorant includes carminic acid and its derivatives, analogously to the E 120 standard. Carminic acid has the empirical formula C22H198O13 and a molecular weight of ca. 493. From the chemical point of view, it is 7-p-D-glucopyranosyl-1-methyl-3,5,6,8-tetrahydroxyanthra-9,10-chinon-2-carboxylic acid of the formula

(Formula Removed)
and its free form is accompanied in the colorant by minor amounts of its derivatives and/or complexes, in which carminic acid is bound, e.g., of a derivative of the formula
(Formula Removed)
which has the empirical formula C25H26O14 and a molecular weight of ca. 550. The ultraviolet, infrared and mass spectra have confirmed an anthraquinone structure.
The multiplication of the culture of the production strain is performed in test tubes with agarised cabbage infusion as the broth by means of the method of periodic
reinoculation from operational bunches.
The above broth may be prepared e.g. by the following procedure:
200 to 300 g of finely grated cabbage is added to 1 litre of drinking water and it is boiled for 20 minutes. After cooling down to the temperature of 50 °C, the solution is filtered. The filtrate is completed to 1 litre and 20 g of agar-agar is added. The sterilization of the broth takes place at 70 to 80 kPa for 20 minutes. The prepared broth is divided per 6 to 8 ml into sterile test tubes dimensioned 18 x 150 mm at a temperature of 50 to 55 °C and is sterilized in autoclaves under the following conditions: temperature 116 °C, steam pressure 100 kPa, sterilization period 20 min.
After having been sterilized, the test tubes with the agarised slope broth are dried in advance in a thermostat at the temperature of 37 °C for one day. The finished bunches are inoculated with the culture of the production strain and they are let to ripe at the temperature of 27 to 29 °C. The incubation period is 5 days.
The active colonies of the microorganisms are harvested by means of further reinoculations of spores in a Petri dish with the agarised cabbage infusion. A basis for the selection of the active colonies is the colouring intensity of the colonies of a minimum diameter of 0.5 to 1 cm, with a smooth surface and with a growing zone of min. 0.1 to 0.2 cm. The active colonies are harvested in the agarised cabbage infusion.
Based on its morphological and cultural properties, the recovered fungus strain is most approaching to the species Penicillium oxalicum (according to I.M. Pidoplichko, 1972).
For obtaining the red colorant of the invention, it is possible to perform the cultivation of the production strain in fermentors, in liquid broths, by means of the submerged method. The quantity of the inoculated material is 3 to 7 wt. %. After the inoculation, operational bunches with a five-day culture incubated in a cabbage infusion are used. The cultivation of the seed material is performed at the temperature of 27 to 29 °C within 64 to 68 hours.
The optimum conditions for performing the procedure of the microbiological
synthesis include the temperature of 27 to 290C, continuous mixing with the peripheral velocity of about 280 min-1 , supply of air in the proportion of 1.2 air volumes to 1.0 volume of the broth, a gauge pressure in the operational fermentor amounting to 50 to 80 kPa.
Already after fermenting the production microorganism for 30 to 35 hours, the liquid above the culture becomes red, and the intensity of the red colour is at its maximum - dark cerise colour - after an incubation period of 68 to 72 hours.
As components of the broth there are used carbohydrates, various saccharides, polyfunctional alcohols and hydrocarbons, and also wastes of sugar production -molasses - in the quantity of 10 to 20 g for 1 litre of water.
For supplying nitrogen, corn extract, yeast autolysate or extract, and also compounds containing nitrogen in various forms (such as amino acids) at a quantity of nitrogen of 0,5 to 0,7 wt. % can be used.
The optimum values of the broth are as follows: pH 5.8 to 6.2, content of carbohydrates 1.5 to 1.8 wt. %., content of ammonia nitrogen 0.66 to 0.69 wt. %.
Examples
Broth composition Example 1
Granulated sugar 12 to 20 g/l
Corn extract 5 to 10 g/l
Zinc sulfate 0.002 g/l
Magnesium sulfate 0.001 g/l
Example 2
Granulated sugar 12 to 20 g/l
Yeast extract 5 to 10 g/l
Zinc sulfate 0.002 g/l
Magnesium sulfate 0.001 g/l
Example 3
Molasses 12 to 20 g/l
Corn extract or yeast extract or autolysate 5 to 10 g/l
Zinc sulfate 0.002 g/l
Magnesium sulfate 0.001 g/l
The broth in the operating fermentor is inocluated with a two-day culture of
Penicillium oxalicum var. Armeniaca CCM 8242, which has been cultivated in an
inoculation device. The quantity of the inoculation material amounts to 3 up to 7 vol.
% of the broth.
Separation of the culture supenatant from the fungus biomass
After the biosynthesis of the red colorant is completed, the liquid from the broth is filtered or centrifuged off for being separated from the biomass. For the colorant to be precipitated, the liquid is acidified to pH 3.0 to 2.5. The acidification can be performed by any organic or inorganic acid. The precipitation may be performed with aluminium potassium sulfate AIK2(SO4)3. Thus a colorant which is insoluble in
bases and alcohols is obtained. It is soluble in an alcaline solution at a pH of 9.0 to 10.0. After the precipitation, the colorant is separated from the liquid by centrifuging.
Example 4
The precipitate is dissolved in ethylalcohol and filtered. The alcohol is removed
and the colorant in the crystalline form is obtained. Example 5
The precipitate is dissolved in an ammonia solution at a pH of 9.0 to 10.0. A 5 to 50 % aqueous solution of a red colorant is obtained.
Industrial applicability
The final product of the technology according to the invention is a red colorant of a microbiological origin, destined for food and cosmetic industries.




WE CLAIM :
1. A method for the production of a red colorant, characterized in that
cultivating the strain Penicillium oxalicum var. Armeniaca CCM 8242
at a temperature of 25 to 30 °C, at a gauge pressure of 50 to 80 kPa,
in a broth of pH 3 to 9, containing carbohydrates and ammonia
nitrogen, for 60 to 72 hours, and thereafter the liquid is removed from
the nutrient broth and the resulting red colorant is isolated from said
liquid.
2. The method as claimed in claim 1, wherein cultivating the strain at a
temperature of 27 to 29 °C, at a gauge pressure of 50 to 80 kPa, with
continuous mixing at a peripheral speed of 280 rpm, with air supplied
at a ratio of 1.2 volumes of air to 1.0 volume of a broth having pH 5.8
to 6.2 and containing from 1.5 to 1.8 wt. % carbohydrates and from
0.66 to 0.69 wt. % ammonia nitrogen, for 64 to 68 hours.
3. The red colorant produced by the method as claimed in claims 1 and 2
whenever utilized as food or cosmetic colorant.
4. A method for the production of a red colorant substantially as herein
described with reference to the forgoing examples.

Documents:

470-del-1999-abstract.pdf

470-del-1999-claims.pdf

470-del-1999-correspondence-others.pdf

470-del-1999-correspondence-po.pdf

470-del-1999-description (complete).pdf

470-del-1999-form-1.pdf

470-del-1999-form-13.pdf

470-del-1999-form-19.pdf

470-del-1999-form-2.pdf

470-del-1999-form-3.pdf

470-del-1999-form-4.pdf

470-del-1999-form-6.pdf

470-del-1999-gpa.pdf

470-del-1999-petiton-137.pdf


Patent Number 222179
Indian Patent Application Number 470/DEL/1999
PG Journal Number 33/2008
Publication Date 15-Aug-2008
Grant Date 28-Jul-2008
Date of Filing 24-Mar-1999
Name of Patentee EDUARD SARDARYAN
Applicant Address SAKAOVA 1386, 53009 PARDUBICE, CZECH REPUBLIC.
Inventors:
# Inventor's Name Inventor's Address
1 DR. EDUARD SARDARYAN SAKAROVA 1386, 53009 PARDUBICE, CZECH REPUBLIC.
PCT International Classification Number C12N 001/14
PCT International Application Number N/A
PCT International Filing date
PCT Conventions:
# PCT Application Number Date of Convention Priority Country
1 PV 970-98 1998-03-30 Czech Republic