| Literature DB >> 30309608 |
Jingjing Huang1, Amr M Bakry2, Shuwei Zeng3, Shanbai Xiong1, Tao Yin1, Juan You1, Mingcong Fan1, Qilin Huang4.
Abstract
Effect of phosphates on the heat-induced gel characteristics of myofibrillar protein (MP) from grass carp was investigated. Both heating and phosphates exerted significant influences. Heating induced more elastic, water-holding and less flowing gel. But phosphates had diverse effects at different temperatures. At 4 °C and 40 °C, phosphate as a dominant factor reduced the gel elasticity and resistance and increased flowability with increasing levels of phosphates. Furthermore, 280 mg/kg sodium pyrophosphate (SPP) or 440 mg/kg sodium triphosphates (STP) transformed MP from weak gel into concentrated solution. It clarified phosphates disentangled MP macromolecules and inhibited their aggregation and pre-gelation at low temperature. At 80 °C, heating accompanied with phosphates governed MP gelation. The appropriate level of phosphates (SPP superior to STP) endowed MP-phosphate gels with the lowest flowability and greatest elasticity, textural properties as well as finest microstructures. Besides, phosphates entrapped a portion of weak immobile water more tightly into smaller-sized pores of protein network.Entities:
Keywords: Gelling characteristics; Glutaraldehyde (PubChem CID: 3485); Grass carp; Hydrochloric acid (PubChem CID: 313); Isoamyl acetate (PubChem CID: 31276); Myofibrillar protein; Phosphates; Sodium chloride (PubChem CID: 5234); Sodium pyrophosphate decahydrate (PubChem CID: 3084150); Sodium triphosphate (PubChem CID: 24455); Tris (PubChem CID: 6503); Water mobility
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30309608 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2018.08.028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514