Effect of polymeric cosolutes on calcium pectinate gelation. Part 3. Gum arabic and overview |
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Authors: | P. Giannouli R. K. Richardson E. R. Morris |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Food and Nutritional Sciences, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland b Cranfield University at Silsoe, Silsoe, Bedford MK45 4DT, UK |
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Abstract: | Addition of gum arabic (average Mr≈450 kDa; 0.5–2.0 wt%) to solutions of low methoxy pectin (DE 31; 2.0 wt%; pH≈2.9–3.0) with stoichiometric Ca2+ caused massive increases in G′ and G″ in the pre-gel state at 90 °C (attributed to segregative interactions promoting formation of calcium-mediated ‘egg-box’ junctions between pectin chains) but had little effect on the gels formed on cooling to 5 °C. This is in marked contrast to the behaviour of other polymeric cosolutes studied in the investigations reported in the two preceding papers, which caused large reductions in gel moduli (attributed to excessive association of calcium pectinate into large aggregated bundles); the difference is tentatively ascribed to strengthening of the calcium pectinate network by divalent counterions to the uronate residues in gum arabic. When the complication of cation exchange was eliminated by extensive dialysis of gum arabic against 100 mM Na+ and use of the final dialysate in preparation of mixtures with calcium pectinate, massive increases in G′ and G″ at high temperature were again observed, but with accompanying reductions in moduli at low temperature, which, at gum arabic concentrations above 1.0 wt%, arose from collapse of the developing calcium pectinate network during cooling. The tentative conclusion from this work, and from the two preceding papers, is that enthalpically unfavourable (segregative) interactions between low methoxy pectin and polymeric cosolutes can be relieved in two ways: (i) Ca2+-mediated self-association of pectin into compact ordered assemblies which occupy less of the total volume, and (ii) conformational rearrangement of the cosolute molecules to minimise segmental interactions with pectin; conformational rearrangement is inhibited by chain stiffness and by branching; thus polymeric cosolute molecules of limited flexibility are more effective in promoting self-association of pectin than more flexible molecules of comparable size, and branched molecules are more effective than linear chains of comparable stiffness. |
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Keywords: | Author Keywords: Biopolymer mixtures Pectin Gum arabic Gelation Rheology |
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