Abstract

The aggregation and gelation properties of β-lactoglobulin (BLG), a globular protein from milk, was studied in aqueous ethanol solutions at room temperature. The phase state diagrams as a function of pH and ethanol concentration showed that a gel structure appeared after a period ranging from 1 min to 1 week, depending on the physico-chemical conditions. The in-situ kinetics of aggregation were followed by several methods in order to obtain a better understanding of the building of aggregates by the addition of ethanol. It was shown that the aggregation kinetics highly depended upon the pH, the process being fastest at pH 7. Viscoelasticity and infrared measurements indicated that alcohol-induced gelation would proceed via a two-step mechanism: small aggregates loosely connected between them were first built up; a real network took place in a second step. The coarse and irregular structures formed in aqueous ethanol gels revealed by confocal laser scanning microscopy could be analysed in terms of a phase separation. This observation was supported by a syneresis phenomenon visible in the final gel state. BLG in water–ethanol solution would undergo either an inhibition of the demixing by gelation or a binary phase separation accompanied by an irreversible gelation transition.

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