Abstract

The effects of rapid freezing and thawing at acid pH on the physiochemical properties of ovalbumin were examined. At low pH (around 2), UV difference spectra showed microenvironmental changes around the aromatic amino acid residues; elution curves by gel permeation chromatography showed decreasing numbers of monomers after neutralization. These changes depended on the incubation temperature (between -196 and -10 degrees C) and the protein concentration (0.5-10 mg/ml), and a low concentration of ovalbumin incubated at around -40 degrees C suffered the most damage to its conformation. With freezing and then incubation at -40 degrees C, three of the four sulfhydryl groups in the ovalbumin molecule reacted with 2,2'-dithiodipyridine. The CD spectra showed these changes in the secondary structure, but they were smaller than those when guanidine hydrochloride was used for denaturation. Supercooling at -15 degrees C or freezing at -196 degrees C had little or no effect on the conformation of the ovalbumin molecule. Thus, irreversible conformational changes of ovalbumin were caused under the critical freezing condition at an acid pH. These changes arose from partial denaturation and resembled those with thermal denaturation of ovalbumin at neutral pH.

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