Keratinous and corneous-based products towards circular bioeconomy: A research review
Review article, 2024

Keratins and corneous proteins are key components of biomaterials used in a wide range of applications and are potential substitutes for petrochemical-based products. Horns, hooves, feathers, claws, and similar animal tissues are abundant sources of α-keratin and corneous β-proteins, which are by-products of the food industry. Their close association with the meat industry raises environmental and ethical concerns regarding their disposal. To promote an eco-friendly and circular use of these materials in novel applications, efforts have focused on recovering these residues to develop sustainable, non-animal-related, affordable, and scalable procedures. Here, we review and examine biotechnological methods for extracting and expressing α-keratins and corneous β-proteins in microorganisms. This review highlights consolidated research trends in biomaterials, medical devices, food supplements, and packaging, demonstrating the keratin industry's potential to create innovative value-added products. Additionally, it analyzes the state of the art of related intellectual property and market size to underscore the potential within a circular bioeconomic model.

Resource recovery

Alpha-keratin

Environmentally sustainable technology

Biotechnology

Corneous beta-protein

Author

Giovanni Davide Barone

University of Graz

Irene Tagliaro

University of Milano-Bicocca

Rodrigo Oliver Simancas

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Matteo Radice

University of Bari Aldo Moro

Livia M. Kalossaka

Imperial College London

Michele Mattei

Luiss Guido Carli University

Antonino Biundo

University of Bari Aldo Moro

Isabella Pisano

Interuniversity Consortium Chemical Reactivity and Catalysis (CIRCC)

University of Bari Aldo Moro

Amparo Jimenez Quero

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Industrial Biotechnology

Environmental Science and Ecotechnology

26664984 (eISSN)

Vol. 22 100444

SISTERS Systemic Innovations for a SusTainable reduction of the EuRopean food waStage

European Commission (EC) (101037796), 2021-11-01 -- 2026-04-30.

CIRCALGAE CIRCular valorisation of industrial ALGAE waste streams into high-value products to foster future sustainable blue biorefineries in Europe.

European Commission (EC) (101060607), 2022-10-01 -- 2026-09-30.

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Subject Categories

Industrial Biotechnology

Earth and Related Environmental Sciences

DOI

10.1016/j.ese.2024.100444

More information

Latest update

8/23/2024