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Takunrat Taksima, a doctoral student from Kasetsart University in Thailand, is spending a year at the LSU AgCenter studying the antiaging effects of the chemical astaxanthin, which is derived from crawfish shells. She is working in Subramanian Sathivel’s laboratory, where several projects are looking at deriving benefits from various parts of crawfish. Photo by Tobie Blanchard/LSU AgCenter

More than meat: LSU AgCenter researcher sees benefit in all parts of crawfish

BATON ROUGE — An LSU AgCenter researcher is working on ways to add value to the Louisiana crawfish crop. Tail meat is the main reason farmers raise crawfish, but Subramaniam Sathivel sees benefits in the entire crustacean.
Sathivel, an AgCenter food processing and engineering professor, is working on a minced meat made from undersized crawfish, which have low economic value. Sathivel is also helping a local crawfish farmer start a crawfish minced meat company.
Sathivel is putting whole undersized crawfish through a deboning machine, which removes the shells and minces the meat in the process.
“You can use the minced meat to add crawfish flavoring to products or produce crawfish patties,” Sathivel said.
Takunrat Taksima, a doctoral student from Kasetsart University in Thailand, is using the shells from the process to study the antiaging effects of a chemical derived from the shells.
Taksima is extracting and developing a delivery system containing astaxanthin, an antioxidant, to study its use in slowing the progression of Alzheimer’s disease.
She is spending a year in Sathivel’s lab working on this project. Midway through her study, she has explored ways to get the proper dosage of astaxanthin into a capsule from. Her next step will be testing its antiaging effects on laboratory rats.
“I will divide the rats into five groups to study them,” Taksima said. “I will study their behavior, body weight and oxidation levels on their organs.”
Sathivel said he also plans to study astaxanthin’s effects on oxidative stress-related diabetes and obesity.
Alexander Chouljenko, a doctoral student in the LSU College of Agriculture School of Nutrition and Food Sciences, is studying the oil removed from the minced meat.
“I am looking at the oil’s nutritional profile, the lipid oxidation properties, and how the oil flows,” Chouljenko said.
Chouljenko also is studying the application potential of the oil, which he suspects is high in omega-3 fatty acids. The oil is expected to provide health benefits, and he said it could be used to fortify foods. Because of its bright red color, the oil could also be used as a food coloring.

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