Abstract
The gel-forming characteristics of milk proteins were investigated by employing skim milk either nonpreheated or preheated at 80°C, and coagulating them at 70 or 80°C with glucono-delta-lactone. The solubility of each gel in the phosphate buffer (pH 7.0) containing urea and 2- mercaptoethanol was examined. The disulfide bonds played a more important role in the gel coagulated at 80°C from skim milk preheated at 80°C than in the gel coagulated at 70°C from nonpreheated skim milk.The effect of the reduction treatment with 2-mercaptoethanol was more pronounced on preheated skim milk than on nonpreheated skim milk. Sulfhydryl groups and disulfide bonds, which were buried in the molecules of whey proteins in their native state, were rendered accessible following heat treatment at 80°C.The gel prepared from skim milk pretreated with oxidizing agent, hydrogen peroxide (i.e., skim milk has no accessible sulfhydryl groups as a result), or the gel prepared from skim milk pretreated with reducing agent, 2-mercaptoethanol, (i.e., skim milk has few disulfide bonds as a result), displayed weak gel formation. But the gel prepared from the mixture of these skim milks with appropriate ratio displayed higher gel firmness. These findings suggest that intermolecular disulfide bonds are formed by the exchange reaction between sulfhydryl groups and disulfide bonds during gel formation.
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