Seven sour substances enhancing characteristics and stability of whey protein isolate emulsion and its heat-induced emulsion gel under the non-acid condition

[Display omitted] •Seven sour substances enhance stability of whey isolate protein (WPI) emulsion.•The main force in the acid-treated WPI emulsion gel network is the disulfide bond.•Malic acid-treated WPI emulsion gels have the best gel properties. Protein emulsion gels, as potential novel applicati...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Food research international 2024-09, Vol.192, p.114764, Article 114764
Hauptverfasser: Cui, Handa, Mu, Zhishen, Xu, Heyang, Bilawal, Akhunzada, Jiang, Zhanmei, Hou, Juncai
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Seven sour substances enhance stability of whey isolate protein (WPI) emulsion.•The main force in the acid-treated WPI emulsion gel network is the disulfide bond.•Malic acid-treated WPI emulsion gels have the best gel properties. Protein emulsion gels, as potential novel application ingredients in the food industry, are very unstable in their formation. However, the incorporation of sour substances (phosphoric acid, lactic acid, acetic acid, malic acid, glutamic acid, tartaric acid and citric acid) would potentially contribute to the stable formation of whey protein isolate (WPI) emulsion as well as its gel. Thus, in this work, physical stability of seven acid-treated WPI emulsions, and microstructures, rheological properties, water distribution of its emulsion gels were characterized and compared. Initially, the absolute zeta-potential, interfacial protein adsorption, and emulsifying characteristics of acid-induced WPI emulsions were higher in contrast to acid-untreated WPI emulsions. Moreover, acid-induced WPI emulsions were thermally induced (95 ℃, 30 min) to form its emulsion gel networks via disulfide bonds as the main force (acid-untreated WPI emulsions were unable to form gels). High-resolution microscopic observation revealed that acid-induced WPI in emulsion gel network showed the morphology of aggregates. Dynamic oscillatory rheology results indicated that acid-induced emulsion gel exhibited highly elastic behavior and its viscoelasticity was associated with the generation of protein gel networks and aggregates. In addition, PCA and heatmap results further illustrated that malic acid-induced WPI emulsion gels had the best water holding capacity and gel characteristics. Therefore, this study could provide an effective way for the foodstuffs industry to open up new texture and healthy emulsion gels as fat replaces and loading systems of bioactive substances.
ISSN:0963-9969
1873-7145
1873-7145
DOI:10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114764