Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1184819 Food Chemistry 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effects of different salt concentrations (6%, 15%, 18% and 24% NaCl (w/w)) on the conformational changes of cod muscle proteins during brine salting were examined in this study. Proteins were extracted from the brine salted samples with solutions of 1 M (5.9%) and 4 M (23.4%) NaCl and the quantity of salt soluble proteins (SSP), disulfide bond (S–S), total sulfhydryl (SH) and available SH content in the soluble fraction were determined. Increased salt concentration in cod muscle promoted protein denaturation and aggregation. The SSP and total SH content decreased, whereas the S–S bond and available SH content increased with increased salt concentration in cod muscle. Disulfide bond formation correlated (r = −0.6) with a decrease in total SH groups. Higher SSP and available SH groups of the samples at lower brine concentrations was explained by smaller concentration gradients and salt diffusion rates, resulting in stronger salting-in at early stages of the brining process. There was a significant difference in conformational changes in proteins extracted with a salt solution of 1 and 4 M, mainly due to a different degree of protein aggregation.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
Authors
, , , , ,