Abstract

Soybean oil bodies (SOB) are naturally pre-emulsified lipid droplets recovered directly from soybean seeds. Almost all food emulsions contain salts. However, it was not clear how the incorporation of salts affected the physicochemical stability of SOB. This study investigated the effect of NaCl (0-1.2%) on the physical and oxidative stability of SOB emulsions under neutral (pH7) and acidic (pH3) conditions. In the presence of NaCl, the SOB emulsion (pH7) showed strong flocculation during storage due to electrostatic screening. The NaCl-induced flocculation of SOB was attenuated at pH3, which may be due to the difference in conformation or interaction of the protein interfaces covering SOB at different pH values. The increase in ionic strength or acid conditioning treatment resulted in a remarkable increase in the stability of SOB emulsions against coalescence. The confocal laser scanning microscopy images also confirmed the NaCl-induced changes in the flocculation/coalescence properties of SOB. The oxidative behavior tests indicated that SOB emulsions containing NaCl were more susceptible to lipid oxidation but protein oxidation was inhibited due to electrostatic screening, which reduced pro-oxidant accessibility of unadsorbed proteins in the emulsion. This oxidative behavior was attenuated at pH3. The incorporation of NaCl significantly reduced the physical and oxidative stability of the SOB emulsion, and acidic pH mitigated NaCl-induced flocculation and lipid oxidation of SOB. © 2021 Society of Chemical Industry.

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