Abstract

Lactoferrin is a protein with important biological functions that can be obtained from milk and by-products derived from the dairy industry, such as whey. Although bovine lactoferrin has been extensively studied, ovine lactoferrin is not quite as well known. In the present study, the effect of several heat treatments in 3 different media, over a temperature range from 66 to 75°C, has been studied on lactoferrin isolated from sheep milk. Denaturation of lactoferrin was determined by measuring its immunoreactivity with specific polyclonal antibodies. Kinetic and thermodynamic parameters obtained indicate that lactoferrin denatures by heat more rapidly in whey than in phosphate buffer or milk. The value of activation energy found for the denaturation process of lactoferrin when treated in whey is higher (390kJ/mol) than that obtained in milk (194kJ/mol) or phosphate buffer (179kJ/mol). This indicates that a great amount of energy is necessary to start denaturation of ovine lactoferrin, probably due to the interaction of this protein with other whey proteins. The changes in the hydrophobicity of lactoferrin after heat treatments were determined by fluorescence measurement using acrylamide. The decrease in the hydrophobicity constant was very small for the treatments from 66 to 75°C, up to 20min, which indicates that lactoferrin conformation did not experienced a great change. The results obtained in this study permit the prediction of behavior of ovine lactoferrin under several heat treatments and show that high-temperature, short-time pasteurization (72°C, 15 s) does not cause loss of its immunoreactivity and, consequently, would not affect its conformation and biological activity.

Highlights

  • Lactoferrin is a protein with important biological functions that can be obtained from milk and by-products derived from the dairy industry, such as whey

  • The electrophoretic pattern shows that the band corresponding to the molecular weight of lactoferrin (80 kDa) appears in the second peak eluted with 0.5 M of sodium chloride, as previously described for bovine lactoferrin (Yoshida and Ye-Xiuyun, 1991)

  • We found that lactoferrin denatured more rapidly when it was heat treated in whey than in milk or phosphate buffer

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Summary

Introduction

Lactoferrin is a protein with important biological functions that can be obtained from milk and by-products derived from the dairy industry, such as whey. The ratio F0/F was represented versus the acrylamide concentration (Q) and the slope of the graphs was defined as the apparent constant Kap, with this value being considered as the relative hydrophobicity: The apparent activation energy for the heat denaturation process of lactoferrin was calculated from the values of the rate constants obtained at each temperature and in each medium of treatment by using the Arrhenius equation: EA

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