Maltase | American Society of Baking
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Maltase

What is maltase?

Maltase is one type of alpha-glucosidase enzymes that splits disaccharides like maltose into their constituent glucose units. 

  • Maltose itself cannot be used or metabolized by baker’s yeast cells.
  • However, when broken down into its glucose components, the latter are quickly consumed by yeast and used for cell growth and metabolism (e.g. fermentation reactions in the absence of oxygen).

Origin

Similar to many other enzymes, maltase is found in various living organisms. It is an essential catalyst that participates in metabolic processes and energy conversion from carbohydrates.

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Function

Refined flour supplies about 1.0% endogenous simple sugars that yeast can use directly. However, this starting amount is typically not enough to produce a fully leavened product. If more food for yeast is needed to comply with standard breadmaking cycle times, then the addition of table sugar and/or amylase enzymes to the formulation will provide the best volume and texture results.

The following block diagram helps visualize the key role of maltase enzyme in the production of fermentable sugars from complex carbohydrates and disaccharides.

A diagram that shows the key role of maltase enzyme in the production of fermentable sugars.

Enzymes that can be produced by baker’s yeast cells include:

  • Invertase
  • Maltase
  • Zymase

Yeast produces both invertase and maltase to break down disaccharides and obtain simple sugars that can be used for cell growth and fermentation reactions. Sugars, such as glucose and fructose, are simple sugars that are fermentable by yeast.

The invertase enzyme in yeast splits sucrose into its components glucose and fructose. This very rapid reaction occurs either during mixing or shortly after. By converting sucrose into glucose and fructose, invertase makes the simple sugars readily available for fermentation.

Maltose, another non-fermentable disaccharide, is produced by beta-amylase activity on damaged starch and dextrins. Maltose must be broken into its two glucose units by maltase enzyme, which can also be expressed by yeast cells. Maltase expression is only triggered by the presence of maltose. Yeast does not release the maltase enzyme to convert maltose until all other simple sugar sources are exhausted.1

Zymase in yeast converts simple sugars into alcohol and organic acids through glycolysis. Zymase enables yeast to produce ethanol and carbon dioxide from glucose.

Application

Maltase is not a common bakery enzyme. It is assumed and expected that yeast cells produce enough quantities of maltase molecules once maltose concentration gets high enough. Maltose amount becomes significant once starch hydrolysis has taken place during fermentation.

Without maltase, yeast would not be able to ferment the simple sugars obtained from starch modification unless a specialized amylase (e.g. AMG) is added to the formulation. Remember, starch is the major component of flour and dough. This situation would cause breadmaking processes, such as strict sourdough systems, to be virtually impossible or unfeasible. Under such scenarios, the dough systems that rely on baker’s yeast would be far too expensive and lengthy if not properly addressed with the help of other functional enzymes.

EC number Substrate Reaction catalyzed
3.2.1.20 Maltose units (as such)Maltose units produced from starch hydrolysis Maltose + H2O → Glucose + Glucose

Regulation

In case it is marketed as such, maltase can be considered as a GRAS substance (Generally Recognized as Safe).

References

  1. Reed, G., and Nagodawithana, T.W. “Use of Yeast in Baking.” Yeast Technology, 2nd Edition, Van Nostrand Reinhold, 1991, pp. 315–362.