| Literature DB >> 34066033 |
Arona Figueroa Pires1, Natalí Garcia Marnotes1,2, Olga Díaz Rubio2, Angel Cobos Garcia2, Carlos Dias Pereira1,3.
Abstract
The search for new food products that promote consumers health has always been of great interest. The dairy industry is perhaps the best example regarding the emergence of new products with claimed health benefits. Cheese whey (CW), the by-product resulting from cheese production, and second cheese whey (SCW), which is the by-product of whey cheese manufacture, have proven to contain potential ingredients for the development of food products with improved nutritional characteristics and other functionalities. Nowadays, due to their nutritional quality, whey products have gained a prominent position among healthy food products. However, for a long time, CW and SCW were usually treated as waste or as animal feed. Due to their high organic content, these by-products can cause serious environmental problems if discarded without appropriate treatment. Small and medium size dairy companies do not have the equipment and structure to process whey and second cheese whey. In these cases, generally, they are used for animal feed or discarded without an appropriate treatment, being the cause of several constraints. There are several studies regarding CW valorization and there is a wide range of whey products in the market. However, in the case of SCW, there remains a lack of studies regarding its nutritional and functional properties, as well as ways to reuse this by-product in order to create economic value and reduce environmental impacts associated to its disposal.Entities:
Keywords: cheese whey; second whey cheese; ultrafiltration; valorization
Year: 2021 PMID: 34066033 PMCID: PMC8151190 DOI: 10.3390/foods10051067
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Average composition of bovine, ovine and caprine whey and of ovine second cheese whey (% w/v).
| Bovine CW | Ovine CW | Caprine CW | Ovine SCW | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total solids | 6.0–7.0 | 7.6–10.5 | 7.07–10.8 | 7.1–8.3 |
| Lactose | 4.2–5.0 | 4.3–6.1 | 5.02–6.7 | 4.5–5.7 |
| Proteins | 0.7–0.9 | 1.6–1.8 | 1.2–0.63 | 0.8–1.2 |
| Fat | 0.1–0.8 | 1.2–2.5 | 0.84 | 0.2–0.4 |
| Minerals | 0.5–0.6 | 1.0–1.8 | 0.57 | 1.7–1.9 |
| pH | 5.6–6.3 | 5.3–5.9 | 6.34 | 5.5–6.3 |
(CW = Cheese whey; SCW = Second cheese whey) Adapted from [28,29,30,31].
Figure 1Scheme of whey cheese (Requeijão) manufacturing and second cheese whey (Sorelho) production.
Relative proportions of bovine, ovine and caprine whey proteins in whey (%).
| Whey Proteins | Bovine Whey | Ovine Whey | Caprine Whey |
|---|---|---|---|
| β-Lactoglobulin | 53.3–66.0 | 73.1 | 46.6 |
| α-Lactalbumin | 15.0–20.0 | 17.9 | 18.3 |
| Serum Albumin (SA) | 6.0–7.0 | 2.7 | 5 |
| Immunoglobulins | 11.0–13.3 | - | - |
| Lactoferrin | 0.7-3.3 | 1.6 | 2 |
| Lactoperoxidase | 0.5–1.0 | - | - |
| Enzymes | 0.5 | - | - |
Adapted from [17,25,45,51,57].
Figure 2Representative scheme for obtaining whey protein concentrates (WPC) and whey protein isolate (WPI).
Identification of peptides of WPC hydrolyzed fraction.
| Source Protein | Peptide Fragment | Amino Acid Sequence |
|---|---|---|
| α-La | f10–15 | RELKDL |
| f16–26 | KGYGGVSLPEW | |
| f32–40 | HTSGYDTQA | |
| f97–103 | DKVGINY | |
| f97–104 | DKVGINYW | |
| f98–104 | KVGINYW | |
| β-Lg | f33–42 | DAQSAPLRVY |
| β-CN | f1–6 | RELEEL |
| f94–105 | GVSKVKEAMAPK | |
| CMP | f106–115 | MAIPPKKNQD |
| f107–115 | AIPPKKNQD | |
| f161–169 | TVQVTSTAV |
(α-La = α-Lactalbumin; β-Lg = β-Lactoglobulin; β-CN = β-Casein; CMP = Caseinomacropeptide) Adapted from [58].
Figure 3Example of UF/DF applied to SCW for the obtaining of fermented SCW drinks.
Examples of food and non-food applications of CW and SCW products.
| APPLICATIONS | FUNCTIONS OF CW/SCW PRODUCTS |
|---|---|
| FOOD APPLICATIONS | |
| Reduced-fat/Low-fat cheese | Fat mimetics |
| Processed cheese | Emulsification/Water binding |
| Yoghurts/Low-fat yoghurts/Fermented drinks | Protein fortification/Fat mimetics |
| Ice-cream | Fat substitution/Emulsification/Foaming |
|
| |
| Sauces/Salad dressings | Emulsification/Fat mimetics/Creaminess |
| Drinks | Body/Creaminess/Viscosity |
|
| |
| Ham | Water binding/Gelification |
| Structured meat | Water binding/Gelification |
| Sausages and meat emulsions | Water binding/Emulsification/Fat mimetics/Gelification |
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| |
| Surimi | Water binding/Emulsification/Fat mimetics |
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| |
| Bakery | Flavour/Egg substitution/Stabilization/Foaming |
| Snacks | Binding properties/Fat substitution/Foaming and expansion |
|
| |
| Edible films/coatings | Gas/Water vapour barrier |
| Edible films/coatings with incorporation biologically active components | Antimicrobials/Antioxidants |
|
| |
| Infant formulae | Nutritional adequation |
| Elderly formulae | Nutritional adequation/Suplementation |
| Sport suplements (protein enriched bars, crackers and drinks | Nutritional suplementation |
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| Protein hydrolisates | Several health promoting functions (e.g., antihipertensive activity) |
| NON FOOD APPLICATIONS | |
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| Tissue engineering | Nanoparticles/Encapsulation |
|
| |
| For energy production | Algae/Lipids for biodiesel |
| For ethanol and lactic acid production | Ethanol; Lactic acid |
| For bioplastic production | Polylactide/polyhydroxyalkanoates |
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| |
| Environmentally safe adhesives | Polymeriztion |
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| Several applications in textiles | Enhanced staining/Abrasion resistence and tensile strenght/Flame retardancy/Antimicrobial properties/Microencapsulation of aroma |
Sources [11,12,15,17,26,27,29,40,41,44,77,78,79,80,81,82].
Figure 4Membrane separation processes used to process CW and SCW.
Comparison of membrane separation of milk components.
| Type | Pore Size (nm) | Retained Compounds | MW of Compound (kDa) |
|---|---|---|---|
| MF | 20–4.000 | Bacteria, fat globules and casein micelles | 100–500 |
| UF | 20–200 | Whey proteins | 1–100 |
| NF | <2 | Lactose, divalent salts | 0.1–1 |
| RO | <2 | Monovalent salts | <0.1 |
| Electrodialysis | - | Removal of salt and deacidification of solutions containing neutral components | - |
| Pervaporation | - | Used for volatile organic pollutants | - |
(MW = Molecular weight; MF = Microfiltration; UF = Ultrafiltration; NF = Nanofiltration; RO = Reverse osmosis) Adapted from [45,90].
Reports on the valorization and characterization of second cheese whey.
| Applications | Techniques | Results | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Valorize ovine whey and SCW by TP/MF for obtaining whey powders | TP/MF and UF/DF | Clarification of by-products improved UF treatments. | [ |
| Profile of SCW from isolated peptide fraction | LC-HRMS-based method | Wide presence of valuable potential bioactive peptides | [ |
| SCW used as substrate for production of a fermented probiotic drink | Microbiology | Good results for SCW as substrate for the production of a fermented probiotic drink | [ |
| SCW used for lactose production | Crystallization | Good results obtained for the crystallization process for manufacture of lactose from SCW | [ |
| Recovery of SCW organic nutrients | NF | SCW fractionation can be used as a raw material in the pharmaceutical, food or paper industries and minimize the wastewater environmental impact | [ |
| Development of SCW wastewater treatment system for biodiesel and removing polluting nutrients | Microalgae | Algae could efficiently treat SCW and can be used for biodiesel production | [ |
| Zeolite used to treat SCW and remove ammonium from artificial wastewater | Continuous flow column experiment | Zeolite nitrogen from SCW can be a fertilizing agent | [ |
| Hexavalent chromium (Cr (VI)) was co-treated with SCW | Pilot-scale of biological trickling filters | Results indicate that the agro-industrial wastewater could be used as a carbon source for Cr (VI) reduction | [ |
| Production of a ready to drink beverage produced from SCW with fruit puree | Culture addition | Addition of starter cultures was promising, and the addition of fruit puree improved sensory properties | [ |
| Dairy effluents used to be converted in renewable sources for bioethanol production | Fermentation | Whey and SCW showed suitability for bioethanol production | [ |
| Use of whey and SCW as media for the growth of LAB | Fermentation | Whey was considered a good media for LAB growth and SCW has a good potential too | [ |
| Adequacy of SCW as a growth medium for lipid production | Fermentation | [ | |
| SCW to be used as economic alternative substrate to grow microalgae | Fermentation | SCW has a very good potential to be used as a culture medium | [ |
| SCW as a growth medium preserving biodiversity and maximizing bacterial cells concentration of natural starter cultures for pecorino Roman PDO cheese | Fermentation | A large concentration of cells was obtained in the modified SCW pellets, without modify the technological performance and microbial fingerprint. | [ |
| Biogas production by anaerobic co-digestion of cattle slurry and CW | Anaerobic digestion | The mix has a similar energetic potential for anaerobic digestion as energy crops such as maize. | [ |
| Fermentation of fruit-vegetable waste and CW for the production of H2 | Fermentation | Considered a promising way for combining energy generation and lignocellulosic waste management. | [ |
| Co-digestion of CW and glycerin | Anaerobic digestion | CW has great potential for methane production through anaerobic biological processes. However, it presents instabilities due to its high biodegradability. It is proposed its co-digestion with glycerin. | [ |