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handle: 10261/100033
The effects of two different high-pressure (HP) equipments, operating at industrial- and pilot scales, and of the HP-release rate on the contents of non-sedimentable proteins and denatured whey proteins were investigated after treatments of skim milk-from 250 to 650 MPa. Non-sedimentable caseins and denatured whey proteins significantly increased with the pressure level. The industrial-scale equipment produced lower micellar disintegration than the pilot-scale equipment with similar degrees of whey protein denaturation. Ultracentrifugation supernatants obtained from skim milk at 100,000×g and 20 °C for 1 h were also HP-treated for comparative purposes, showing that, in skim milk, the presence of casein promoted the denaturation of whey proteins, although the extent of whey protein denaturation did not influence the release of casein to the soluble phase. Furthermore, most denatured whey proteins remained soluble after treatment in both equipments. In the pilot-scale equipment, the pressure-release rate influenced casein solubilization and whey protein denaturation. © 2013 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
This work received financial support from the project CENIT-2007-2016 Futural, Ingenio Program. F. I. Bravo acknowledges the Autonomous Community of Madrid for financial support through the project ALIBIRD-CM-S-505/AGR-0153.
Peer Reviewed
HP treatment, Protein distribution, Pilot scale, Pressure-release rate, Milk proteins, Industrial scale
HP treatment, Protein distribution, Pilot scale, Pressure-release rate, Milk proteins, Industrial scale
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