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Journal ArticleDOI

Controlled food protein aggregation for new functionality

TLDR
In this article, the authors discuss how the formation of aggregates with different morphologies is related to the creation of either particulate or fine stranded gels, and make a distinction between primary aggregation leading to roughly spherical particles or more or less flexible strands and secondary aggregation leads to fractal clusters, gels or precipitates.
Abstract
Globular proteins are an important component of many food products. Heat-induced aggregation of globular proteins gives them new properties that can be useful in food products. In order to optimize functionality, the aggregation process needs to be controlled, which in turn requires good understanding of the mechanism. Heating aqueous solutions of globular proteins leads to the formation of aggregates with one of four distinctly different morphologies: spherical particles, flexible strands, semi-flexible fibrils, and fractal clusters. We review recent research in this area focusing on the parameters that control the morphology including the influence of hydrolysis. The aggregation mechanism and the effect of the morphology on the functionality will be addressed. A distinction is made between primary aggregation leading to roughly spherical particles or more or less flexible strands and secondary aggregation leading to fractal clusters, gels or precipitates. We will discuss how the formation of aggregates with different morphologies is related to the formation of either particulate or fine stranded gels.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Biopolymer-based particles as stabilizing agents for emulsions and foams

TL;DR: A recent review as discussed by the authors describes recent advances in the stabilization of emulsions and foams by edible particles of nanoscale and micro-scale dimensions, including common food proteins such as whey protein, soy protein and gelatin.
Journal ArticleDOI

Food protein amyloid fibrils: Origin, structure, formation, characterization, applications and health implications

TL;DR: The biological fate and the potential toxicity mechanisms of food amyloid fibrils are discussed, and an experimental protocol for their health safety validation is proposed in the concluding part of the review.
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Whey and soy protein-based hydrogels and nano-hydrogels as bioactive delivery systems

TL;DR: This review article focuses on versatile mechanisms for gelation of globular proteins and highlights the current studies on whey and soy protein hydrogels as two key animal and herbal proteins used in fabricating coating materials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protein aggregation, particle formation, characterization & rheology

TL;DR: This review attempts to give a concise overview of recent progress made in mechanistic understanding of protein aggregation, particulate formation and protein solution rheology and highlights some areas of controversy and debate that need further attention from the scientific community.
Journal ArticleDOI

An overview on preparation of emulsion-filled gels and emulsion particulate gels

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of polymer-surfactant interactions on the rheology of emulsion gel systems is explained, and irreversible and reversible clustering of oil droplets as the basis of making emulsion particulate gels is deliberated.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

X-ray and light scattering study of the structure of large protein aggregates at neutral pH

TL;DR: In this paper, the structure of large ovalbumin and β-lactoglobulin aggregates formed after heat-denaturation at neutral pH was studied using a combination of light and small-angle X-ray scattering.
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Light Scattering Study of Heat-Induced Aggregation and Gelation of Ovalbumin

TL;DR: The effect of ionic strength on the interaction of ovalbumin, a globular egg white protein, in aqueous solution was investigated using static and dynamic light scattering as mentioned in this paper.
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Biopolymer Nanoparticles from Heat‐Treated Electrostatic Protein–Polysaccharide Complexes: Factors Affecting Particle Characteristics

TL;DR: How the size and concentration of biopolymer particles formed by heating beta-lactoglobulin-pectin complexes could be manipulated by controlling preparation conditions was examined.
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Micro-phase separation explains the abrupt structural change of denatured globular protein gels on varying the ionic strength or the pH

TL;DR: In this paper, the structure of β-lactoglobulin gels was studied as a function of the pH (2-8) and the NaCl concentration (0-1 M) over a wide range of length scales (1 nm-100 µm).
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of calcium on the morphology and functionality of whey protein nanofibrils.

TL;DR: Small-amplitude oscillatory measurements made in situ during heating of 10% w/w WPI at 80 °C suggest that CaCl(2) is not involved in either fibril structure or gel structure, and this was confirmed with dialysis experiments.
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