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Structural changes during heat-induced gelation of globular protein dispersions
Authors:Ikeda S  Nishinari K
Institution:Department of Food and Nutrition, Osaka City University, 3-3-138 Sugimoto, Sumiyoshi-ku, Osaka 558-8585, Japan. ikeda@life.osaka-cu.ac.jp
Abstract:Macroscopic and molecular structural changes during heat-induced gelation of beta-lactoglobulin, bovine serum albumin, ovalbumin, and alpha-lactalbumin aqueous dispersions were probed by the mechanical and CD spectroscopy, respectively. Aqueous solutions of the native globular proteins, except for alpha-lactalbumin, exhibited solid-like mechanical spectra-namely, the predominant storage modulus G' over the loss modulus G" in the entire frequency range examined (0.1-100 rad/s), suggesting that these protein solutions were highly structured even before gelation, possibly due to strong repulsions among protein molecules. Such solid-like structures were susceptible to nonlinearly large shear but recovered almost immediately at rest. During gelation by isothermal heating, major changes in the secondary structure of the globular proteins completed within a few minutes, while values of the modulus continued to develop for hours with maintaining values of tandelta (= G"/G') less than unity. As a result, a conventional criterion for mechanically defining the gelation point, such as a crossover between G' and G", was inapplicable to these globular protein systems. beta-Lactoglobulin gels that had passed the gelation point satisfied power laws (G' approximately G" approximately omega(n)) believed to be valid only at the gelation point, suggesting that fractal gel networks, similar to those of critical gels (i.e., gels at the gelation point), were formed.
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