4.7 Review

Sustainable Applications of Animal Waste Proteins

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym14081601

Keywords

collagen; keratin; protein hydrolysates; biomedicine; biodegradation; sustainability

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The growth of global population leads to increased demand for agricultural products, resulting in a rise in by-products formed during processing. Collagen and keratin, as significant components in animal origin protein waste, have vast potential for biotechnological applications in various forms and formats in bioengineering.
Currently, the growth of the global population leads to an increase in demand for agricultural products. Expanding the obtaining and consumption of food products results in a scale up in the amount of by-products formed, the development of processing methods for which is becoming an urgent task of modern science. Collagen and keratin make up a significant part of the animal origin protein waste, and the potential for their biotechnological application is almost inexhaustible. The specific fibrillar structure allows collagen and keratin to be in demand in bioengineering in various forms and formats, as a basis for obtaining hydrogels, nanoparticles and scaffolds for regenerative medicine and targeted drug delivery, films for the development of biodegradable packaging materials, etc. This review describes the variety of sustainable sources of collagen and keratin and the beneficial application multiformity of these proteins.

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