Physicochemical and chemical properties of mung bean protein isolate affected by the isolation procedure

The effects of different mung bean protein isolation methods on the chemical composition, the physicochemical properties, and selected antinutritional factors of mung bean protein isolates were investigated. Six protein isolates were prepared by isoelectric precipitation at different extraction pH l...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current research in food science 2023-01, Vol.7, p.100582, Article 100582
Hauptverfasser: Wintersohle, Christina, Kracke, Inola, Ignatzy, Laura Melanie, Etzbach, Lara, Schweiggert-Weisz, Ute
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The effects of different mung bean protein isolation methods on the chemical composition, the physicochemical properties, and selected antinutritional factors of mung bean protein isolates were investigated. Six protein isolates were prepared by isoelectric precipitation at different extraction pH levels (pH 8 and 9), by micellization, and by hybrid isolation at varying salt concentrations (0.25 M, 0.50 M, 0.75 M). The extraction conditions affected the amount of antinutritive compounds of the isolates. Compared to mung bean flour, micellization reduced phytic acid content by approximately 48% and trypsin inhibitor activity by around 88%. The remaining phytic acid concentration of the isolates influenced their re-solubility, particularly under acidic conditions. The protein isolates exhibited significant differences in surface hydrophobicity and thermal characteristics, indicating structural modifications caused by the extraction methods. Micellization and extraction at pH 8 were identified as mildest isolation methods, as evidenced by the highest enthalpy values. SDS-PAGE analysis demonstrated an enrichment of globulins and comparable protein profiles among the isolates, suggesting that the observed differences arise from conformational changes rather than variations in protein composition. The product yield in protein extraction from mung beans ranged from 8% to 19%, emphasizing the importance of enhancing overall extraction efficiency or exploring the utilization of by-products obtained during the protein isolation process. [Display omitted] •Conventional alkali extraction resulted in the highest product yield up to 19%.•Extraction at pH 8 and micellization yielded the most native protein isolates.•Hybrid isolation and micellization reduced trypsin inhibitor activity the most.•Micellized protein isolate revealed the highest protein solubility.
ISSN:2665-9271
2665-9271
DOI:10.1016/j.crfs.2023.100582