Optimization of the Emulsifying Properties of Food Protein Hydrolysates for the Production of Fish Oil-in-Water Emulsions
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Padial Domínguez, Marta; Espejo Carpio, Francisco Javier; Pérez Gálvez, Antonio Raúl; Guadix Escobar, Antonio María; Guadix Escobar, Emilia MaríaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Emulsifying properties Statistical modelling Optimization Protein emulsifiers Physical stability Oxidative stability
Date
2020-05Referencia bibliográfica
Padial-Domínguez, M., Espejo-Carpio, F. J., Pérez-Gálvez, R., Guadix, A., & Guadix, E. M. (2020). Optimization of the Emulsifying Properties of Food Protein Hydrolysates for the Production of Fish Oil-in-Water Emulsions. Foods, 9(5), 636. [DOI: 10.3390/foods9050636]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government CTQ2017-87076-RAbstract
The incorporation of lipid ingredients into food matrices presents a main drawback—their
susceptibility to oxidation—which is associated with the loss of nutritional properties and the
generation of undesirable flavors and odors. Oil-in-water emulsions are able to stabilize and
protect lipid compounds from oxidation. Driven by consumers’ demand, the search for natural
emulsifiers, such as proteins, is gaining much interest in food industries. This paper evaluates
the in vitro emulsifying properties of protein hydrolysates from animal (whey protein concentrate)
and vegetal origin (a soy protein isolate). By means of statistical modelling and bi-objective
optimization, the experimental variables, namely, the protein source, enzyme (i.e., subtilisin, trypsin),
degree of hydrolysis (2–14%) and emulsion pH (2–8), were optimized to obtain their maximal
in vitro emulsifying properties. This procedure concluded that the emulsion prepared from the
soy protein hydrolysate (degree of hydrolysis (DH) 6.5%, trypsin) at pH 8 presented an optimal
combination of emulsifying properties (i.e., the emulsifying activity index and emulsifying stability
index). For validation purposes, a fish oil-in-water emulsion was prepared under optimal conditions,
evaluating its physical and oxidative stability for ten days of storage. This study confirmed that the
use of soy protein hydrolysate as an emulsifier stabilized the droplet size distribution and retarded
lipid oxidation within the storage period, compared to the use of a non-hydrolyzed soy protein isolate.