Betanin is a red glycosidic food dye obtained from beets; its aglycone, obtained by hydrolyzing away the glucose molecule, is betanidin. As a food additive, its E number is E162. Betanin degrades when subjected to light, heat, and oxygen; therefore, it is used in frozen products, products with short shelf life, or products sold in dry state. Betanin can survive pasteurization when in products with high sugar content. Its sensitivity to oxygen is highest in products with high content of water and/or containing metal cations; antioxidants like ascorbic acid and sequestrants can slow this process down, together with suitable packaging. In dry form betanin is stable in presence of oxygen. The color of betanin depends on pH; between four and five it is bright bluish-red, becoming blue-violet as the pH increases. Once the pH reaches alkaline levels betanin degrades by hydrolysis, resulting in a yellow-brown color.
Organism species: Pan-species (General)
CATALOG NO. | PRODUCT NAME | APPLICATIONS | |
Proteins | n/a | Complete Antigen of Betanin (BT) | Antigenic Transformation Customized Service Offer |
Antibodies | n/a | Monoclonal Antibody to Betanin (BT) | Monoclonal Antibody Customized Service Offer |
n/a | Polyclonal Antibody to Betanin (BT) | Polyclonal Antibody Customized Service Offer | |
Assay Kits | n/a | CLIA Kit for Betanin (BT) | CLIA Kit Customized Service Offer |
n/a | ELISA Kit for Betanin (BT) | ELISA Kit Customized Service Offer |