Physico-chemical properties and component interactions in high solids food systems


Autoria(s): Potes, Naritchaya
Contribuinte(s)

Kerry, Joseph P.

Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine, Ireland

Data(s)

31/03/2014

31/03/2014

2014

2014

Resumo

The present study aimed to investigate interactions of components in the high solids systems during storage. The systems included (i) lactose–maltodextrin (MD) with various dextrose equivalents at different mixing ratios, (ii) whey protein isolate (WPI)–oil [olive oil (OO) or sunflower oil (SO)] at 75:25 ratio, and (iii) WPI–oil– {glucose (G)–fructose (F) 1:1 syrup [70% (w/w) total solids]} at a component ratio of 45:15:40. Crystallization of lactose was delayed and increasingly inhibited with increasing MD contents and higher DE values (small molecular size or low molecular weight), although all systems showed similar glass transition temperatures at each aw. The water sorption isotherms of non-crystalline lactose and lactose–MD (0.11 to 0.76 aw) could be derived from the sum of sorbed water contents of individual amorphous components. The GAB equation was fitted to data of all non-crystalline systems. The protein–oil and protein–oil–sugar materials showed maximum protein oxidation and disulfide bonding at 2 weeks of storage at 20 and 40°C. The WPI–OO showed denaturation and preaggregation of proteins during storage at both temperatures. The presence of G–F in WPI–oil increased Tonset and Tpeak of protein aggregation, and oxidative damage of the protein during storage, especially in systems with a higher level of unsaturated fatty acids. Lipid oxidation and glycation products in the systems containing sugar promoted oxidation of proteins, increased changes in protein conformation and aggregation of proteins, and resulted in insolubility of solids or increased hydrophobicity concomitantly with hardening of structure, covalent crosslinking of proteins, and formation of stable polymerized solids, especially after storage at 40°C. We found protein hydration transitions preceding denaturation transitions in all high protein systems and also the glass transition of confined water in protein systems using dynamic mechanical analysis.

Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine (Food Institutional Research Measure (FIRM) 08/R&D/TMFRC/651)

Accepted Version

Not peer reviewed

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

Potes, N. 2014. Physico-chemical properties and component interactions in high solids food systems. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.

182

http://hdl.handle.net/10468/1495

Idioma(s)

en

en

Publicador

University College Cork

Direitos

© 2014, Naritchaya Potes

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/

Palavras-Chave #Nonenzymatic browning #High protein systems #Protein hydration #Protein denaturation #Protein oxidation #Whey proteins #Lactose crystallization #Additivity of water sorption #Molecular size #Oil reactant medium #Protein aggregation #Lactose #Whey
Tipo

Doctoral thesis

Doctoral

PhD (Food Science and Technology)