Physical and Oxidative Stability of Emulsions Stabilized with Fractionated Potato Protein Hydrolysates Obtained from Starch Production Side Stream

Betül Yesiltas*, Pedro Jesús García Moreno, Rasmus Kranold Mikkelsen, Simon Gregersen Echers, Dennis K. Hansen, Mathias Greve-Poulsen, Grethe Hyldig, Egon Bech Hansen, Charlotte Jacobsen*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Abstract

This work studies the emulsifying and antioxidant properties of potato protein hydrolysates (PPHs) fractions obtained through enzymatic hydrolysis of potato protein using trypsin followed by ultrafiltration. Unfractionated (PPH1) and fractionated (PPH2 as >10 kDa, PPH3 as 10–5 kDa, PPH4 as 5–0.8 kDa, and PPH5 as <0.8 kDa) protein hydrolysates were evaluated. Pendant drop tensiometry and dilatational rheology were applied for determining the ability of PPHs to reduce interfacial tension and affect the viscoelasticity of the interfacial films at the oil–water interface. Peptides >10 kDa showed the highest ability to decrease oil–water interfacial tension. All PPH fractions predominantly provided elastic, weak, and easily stretchable interfaces. PPH2 provided a more rigid interfacial layer than the other hydrolysates. Radical scavenging and metal chelating activities of PPHs were also tested and the highest activities were provided by the unfractionated hydrolysate and the fractions with peptides >5 kDa. Furthermore, the ability of PPHs to form physically and oxidatively stable 5% fish oil-in-water emulsions (pH 7) was investigated during 8-day storage at 20 °C. Our results generally show that the fractions with peptides >5 kDa provided the highest physicochemical stability, followed by the fraction with peptides between 5 and 0.8 kDa. Lastly, promising sensory results with mostly mild attributes were obtained even at protein concentration levels that are higher than needed to obtain functional properties. The more prominent attributes (e.g., bitterness and astringency) were within an acceptable range for PPH3 and PPH4
Original languageEnglish
Article number1622
JournalAntioxidants
Volume12
Issue number8
ISSN2076-3921
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 16 Aug 2023

Keywords

  • antioxidant activity
  • emulsifying peptides
  • oil-in-water emulsions
  • protein hydrolysate
  • sensory profile
  • ultrafiltration

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