Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1377265 Carbohydrate Polymers 2012 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The turbidity and rheological properties of bovine serum albumin (BSA)/pectin coacervates show correlations with sodium chloride concentration (CNaCl) and initial protein/polysaccharide ratio (r). Increasing CNaCl from 0.01 to 0.4 M shifts the critical pH (pHφ1), which designates as the critical pH for BSA/pectin coacervate formation, to lower values, and the storage modulus (G′) values of BSA/pectin coacervates tend to be smaller, which can be explained by a salt screening effect in the BSA/pectin coacervates. Moreover, an increase of r from 1:1 to 10:1 favors the formation of BSA/pectin coacervates, as indicated by the increase in pHφ1 and the decrease in pHφ2. The values of G′ increase simultaneously. With further increase of r to 20:1, the pHφ1 changes negligibly and G′ values become much lower. These results reflect that a balance between the positive charges of BSA and the negative charges of pectin favors the formation of BSA/pectin coacervates with more compact network structures.

► An increase of salt concentration hinders the formation of BSA/pectin coacervates. ► The formation of coacervate networks is favorable as the BSA/pectin ratio up to 10:1. ► Increasing of BSA/pectin ratio to 20:1 reduces the formation of coacervate networks.

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