Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
604779 | Food Hydrocolloids | 2013 | 8 Pages |
Native proteins usually undergo structural modification upon adsorption at interface. Heat treatments are commonly applied at the industrial scale and lead to aggregation of proteins. We characterized nanometric aggregates of β-lactoglobulin by infrared spectroscopy in solutions, in hexadecane oil-in-water emulsions and at the air–water interface at low and high (0.1 M) ionic strengths and at pH 7. In solutions, on the contrary to native β-lactoglobulin, all aggregates prepared with or without salt possessed intermolecular β-sheets evidenced by two strong absorption bands at 1614 cm−1 and 1682 cm−1. In emulsions, at low ionic strength, they lose their intermolecular β-sheets once they are adsorbed at the oil–water interface. At high ionic strength, most of aggregates are localized at the interfaces where they lose their intermolecular β-sheets in direct contact with the surface and only partially when they are farther from the interface. The loss of intermolecular β-sheets was similarly observed at the air–liquid interface.
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