Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates

The objective of the work was to study the impact of soy protein hydrolysis on foaming and interfacial properties and to analyze the relationship between them. As starting material a sample of commercial soy protein isolate was used (SP) and hydrolysates were produced by an enzymatic reaction, givin...

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Autores principales: Martínez, K.D., Carrera Sánchez, C., Rodríguez Patino, J.M., Pilosof, A.M.R.
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0268005X_v23_n8_p2149_Martinez
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spelling todo:paper_0268005X_v23_n8_p2149_Martinez2023-10-03T15:13:38Z Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates Martínez, K.D. Carrera Sánchez, C. Rodríguez Patino, J.M. Pilosof, A.M.R. Air-water interface Dilatational rheology Foam Hydrolysates Soy protein Surface pressure Glycine max The objective of the work was to study the impact of soy protein hydrolysis on foaming and interfacial properties and to analyze the relationship between them. As starting material a sample of commercial soy protein isolate was used (SP) and hydrolysates were produced by an enzymatic reaction, giving hydrolysates from 0.4% to 5.35% degree of hydrolysis (DH). In this contribution we have determined foam overrun (FO), stability against liquid drainage and foam collapse, and the apparent viscosity of foams produced by a whipping method. The surface properties determined were the adsorption isotherm and surface dilatational properties of two hydrolysates (2 and 5.35% DH, H1 and H2 respectively). The hydrolysis of soy proteins increased the surface activity at bulk concentrations where SP adopts a condensed conformation at the monolayer. At concentrations where it adopts a more expanded conformation a very low degree of hydrolysis (H1) also promoted the enhancement of surface activity. However, at 5.35% degree of hydrolysis (H2) the surface activity decreased. Moreover, H2 presented lower surface activity than H1 at every bulk concentration. The hydrolysis increased the elastic component of the dilatational modulus and decreased phase angle of films at bulk concentrations below that corresponding to the collapse of SP monolayer (2% bulk protein). SP hydrolysis increased foam overrun and the stability against drainage that could be related to increased surface activity of protein hydrolysates. However, the collapse of foams was promoted by hydrolysis and could be ascribed to a decrease of the relative viscoelasticity (higher phase angle) of surface films. The results point out that a low degree of hydrolysis (2-5%) would be enough to improve the surface activity of SP, decrease foam drainage and maintaining a considerable viscoelasticity of the surface films to retard foam collapse. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Fil:Martínez, K.D. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. Fil:Pilosof, A.M.R. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0268005X_v23_n8_p2149_Martinez
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
topic Air-water interface
Dilatational rheology
Foam
Hydrolysates
Soy protein
Surface pressure
Glycine max
spellingShingle Air-water interface
Dilatational rheology
Foam
Hydrolysates
Soy protein
Surface pressure
Glycine max
Martínez, K.D.
Carrera Sánchez, C.
Rodríguez Patino, J.M.
Pilosof, A.M.R.
Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates
topic_facet Air-water interface
Dilatational rheology
Foam
Hydrolysates
Soy protein
Surface pressure
Glycine max
description The objective of the work was to study the impact of soy protein hydrolysis on foaming and interfacial properties and to analyze the relationship between them. As starting material a sample of commercial soy protein isolate was used (SP) and hydrolysates were produced by an enzymatic reaction, giving hydrolysates from 0.4% to 5.35% degree of hydrolysis (DH). In this contribution we have determined foam overrun (FO), stability against liquid drainage and foam collapse, and the apparent viscosity of foams produced by a whipping method. The surface properties determined were the adsorption isotherm and surface dilatational properties of two hydrolysates (2 and 5.35% DH, H1 and H2 respectively). The hydrolysis of soy proteins increased the surface activity at bulk concentrations where SP adopts a condensed conformation at the monolayer. At concentrations where it adopts a more expanded conformation a very low degree of hydrolysis (H1) also promoted the enhancement of surface activity. However, at 5.35% degree of hydrolysis (H2) the surface activity decreased. Moreover, H2 presented lower surface activity than H1 at every bulk concentration. The hydrolysis increased the elastic component of the dilatational modulus and decreased phase angle of films at bulk concentrations below that corresponding to the collapse of SP monolayer (2% bulk protein). SP hydrolysis increased foam overrun and the stability against drainage that could be related to increased surface activity of protein hydrolysates. However, the collapse of foams was promoted by hydrolysis and could be ascribed to a decrease of the relative viscoelasticity (higher phase angle) of surface films. The results point out that a low degree of hydrolysis (2-5%) would be enough to improve the surface activity of SP, decrease foam drainage and maintaining a considerable viscoelasticity of the surface films to retard foam collapse. © 2009 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
format JOUR
author Martínez, K.D.
Carrera Sánchez, C.
Rodríguez Patino, J.M.
Pilosof, A.M.R.
author_facet Martínez, K.D.
Carrera Sánchez, C.
Rodríguez Patino, J.M.
Pilosof, A.M.R.
author_sort Martínez, K.D.
title Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates
title_short Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates
title_full Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates
title_fullStr Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates
title_full_unstemmed Interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates
title_sort interfacial and foaming properties of soy protein and their hydrolysates
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_0268005X_v23_n8_p2149_Martinez
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