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Protein Recovery from Ethanol By-Products: A Comprehensive Review of Zein Extraction, Processing Technologies, and Industrial Integration Across Dry-Mill Streams

International Journal of Biology and Life Sciences 2026 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Steven Knox

Summary

This review paper is not about microplastics; it examines protein recovery from U.S. ethanol production by-products — particularly the corn protein zein — exploring extraction technologies and opportunities to turn low-value distillers' grains into high-value renewable materials for biorefinery applications.

The U.S. ethanol industry generates more than 40 million metric tons of by-products annually, including whole stillage, thin stillage, wet distillers' grains, syrup, and distillers dried grains with soluble (DDGS).These materials contain substantial quantities of protein.Especially the hydrophobic prolamin zein yet remain underutilized as low-value feed.This review synthesizes the biochemical composition of major ethanol by-product streams, evaluates classical and emerging extraction technologies, examines industrial integration and sustainability advantages, and analyzes market potential.Protein valorization enables ethanol plants to evolve into diversified biorefineries supplying renewable materials and functional proteins while reducing carbon intensity.

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