Title: Protein Functionality
1Protein Functionality
2Protein Functions
- Biological?
- Enzymes
- Structural
- Hormonal
- Transport
- Food?
- Wheat gluten
- Corn
- Egg
- Whey
- Milk
- Other cereals
- Soy
3Protein Structure
20 Amino Acids
Coded in DNA
Primary
Secondary
Self assembly to a single (native) structure.
Depends on primary structure and solution
conditions
Tertiary
( )
Quaternary
Common in foods. Many non-native forms depending
on protein structure, solution conditions (
history) and ingredient interactions
Denatured
4Amino Acids
- The monomer unit of proteins
- R is the side chain.
- One of 20 different chemical compounds
- Some R-groups are acid (other alkali)
- Some R-groups are water soluble (others are not)
Chiral carbon (L-series)
5Amino Acids
- Polar
- Uncharged. Ser, Thr, Asn, Gln, Cys
- Positive (basic). Arg, Lys, His
- Negative (acidic). Asp, Glu,
- Non-Polar
- Aliphatic. Ala, Ile, Leu, Met, Pro, Val
- Aromatic. Phe, Trp, Tyr
6Example Amino Acids
Alanine
Phenylalanine
Glutamic acid
7Peptide Bonds
Amino acids
Water
8Disulfide Bonds
- Two cysteine molecules under oxidizing conditions
- Intermolecular or intramolecular cross-link
9a-Helix
- N-H to CO hydrogen bonds in 4th succeeding A.A.
- Hydrogen bonds parallel to axis
- Typically amphiphilic
10b-Sheet
- CO and N-H perpendicular to chain form
inter-segment H-bonds - Parallel or antiparallel
- b-strands typically 5-15 A.A.
- More stable than a-helix
b-sheet
11Protein Folding
Hydrophobic amino acids
Peptide chain
12Tertiary Structure
13Types of Tertiary Structure
Globular
Disordered
Fibrous
Many insoluble amino acids, protein tends to
minimize surface/volume ratio
Interacts well with water and takes up a random
configuration
Strong secondary structure allows protein to
retain a non-spherical shape
14Quaternary Structure
Folded protein unable to contain some hydrophobic
residues
Dimerized protein shields the hydrophobic amino
acids from water
15Denaturation
- Denaturation
- Balance of forces
- Consequences of denaturation
16Effect of Temperature on Rate of Enzyme Action
rate
denaturant
17Denaturation
- Denaturation is a phenomenon that involves
transformation of a well-defined, folded
structure of a protein, formed under
physiological conditions, to an unfolded state
under non-physiological conditions. - Occurs suddenly and completely over a narrow
range of conditions - Slowly reversible (if at all)
18Thermal Denaturation
- Trypsinogen 55C
- Pepsinogen 60C
- Lysozyme 72C
- Myoglobin 79C
- Soy Glycinin 92C
- Oat globulin 108C
Affected by pH, water, solutes
Table 11
19Why is Denaturation Sudden?
COOPERATIVE PROCESS Partly denatured structure
is weaker so begins to change faster
100
Native Structure
0
Critical value
Concentration of denaturant or temperature
20Types of Denaturation
- Temperature
- Organic solvents
- Surface
- pH
- Shear
21Reversibility?
One native form
Refolding is a complex process particularly for
large proteins or complex proteins
Many denatured forms
22Energy Surface
Many secondary minima amongst denatured states
Free energy
One native state (true energy minimum)
Changes in Conformation
23Denaturation
- The conversion of a biologically functional
molecule into a non-functional form - There are many denatured states but one native
state - Proteins can regenerate to their native state but
slowly - Denatured proteins have a greater tendency to
aggregate.
24Behavior of Denatured Protein
Hydrophobic core Hydrophilic surface
DENATURED
Fast under non-physiological conditions
Slow under physiological conditions
NATIVE
Unfolding forces some hydrophobic AA to surface
AGGREGATED or other ingredient interactions
25Consequences of Denaturation
- Loss of enzymatic activity (death)
- Destruction of toxins
- Improved digestibility
- Loss of solubility
- Changes in texture
26Physical properties
- Hydrodynamic-Aggregation
- Viscosity, Elasticity, Viscoelasticity
- Solubility, Water holding capacity
- Hydrophobic- Surface Active
- Emulsion and foam stabilization
- Flavor binding
27Hydrodynamic Functionality
Dilute
Semi-dilute
rg
Viscosity
Concentrated
Concentration
28Viscosity
- A property of LIQUIDS
- Viscosity is the resistance to flow. The amount
of energy you need to expend to get a given flow
rate. - Stress (force per unit area) is proportional to
rate of strain (i.e., flow rate) - Particles of any type in a fluid will increase
its viscosity - Large, well hydrated polymers contribute most to
viscosity
29Elasticity
- A property of SOLIDS
- Elasticity is the force to achieve a given
percentage change in length - Stress (force per unit area) is proportional to
strain (fractional deformation) - An elastic material must have some solid-like
network throughout the structure - The more load bearing structures the more elastic
- The more inter-structure links the more elastic
30Viscoelasticity
- Many materials simultaneously show solid and
liquid like properties - If they are stretched they will partly and slowly
return to their original shape - Elastic solids would completely recover
- Viscous liquids would retain their shape
31Creep
Dough stretched
Dough released
Length
Time
32Mechanisms of Link formation
- Hydrophobic (following denaturation or
hydrolysis) - Thiol-disulfide interchange
- Enzymic crosslinking
- Also consider repulsive effects (charge)
33Water Binding
- Gel contains pores
- Water can flow out of the pores
- If the gel contracts it may expel liquid
?SYNERESIS - Due to closer association of protein with protein
34Protein hydration
- Water binding capacity
- g H2O/g dry protein at 90-95 ERH
- Water holding capacity
- imbibe remain H2O against gravitation force
within a protein matrix - Dispersibility
35Protein solubility
- Functionalities of proteins are affected by
solubility - pH effects on solubility
- Ionic strength effects on solubility
- Temperature effects
- Effects of organic solvents
36Solubility
37Hydrophobic/Surface Functionality
- Emulsion stabilization
- Foam destabilization
- Flavor binding
38Whey vs. Casein
- Dense, ordered globular proteins
- 2D Gel
- Loose, disordered, flexible chains
- Loop-train-tail model
39Emulsion Stabilization
- Proteins adsorbed to surfaces can stabilize
emulsions and foams by various mechanisms - Proteins are often denatured on binding
electrostatic
steric
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
(a magnification of the lamella between two
touching bubbles or two emulsion droplets)
40Emulsification
- Emulsions dispersions of one liquid in another
- Properties of emulsions
- - type o/w w/o
- - droplet size
- - composition thickness of the continuous
phase the surface layer around the droplets
41Protein in emulsion
- Emulsifiers of o/w food emulsions
- Preventing coalescence
- Increase viscosity of continuous phase
42Protein effects on foaming
- Protein stabilize foams
- Desired properties for foaming
- rapidly adsorb to an interface
- rapidly unfold reorient at an interface
- form viscoelastic film at an interface
- Structural factors flexibility amphiphilic
molecule
43Gelling property
- Gel soft solid with network entrapped small
molecules - Protein gelation
44Protein gels
- Types coagulum-type translucent
- Protein gels highly hydrated system
- Stability types numbers of cross-links per
units - LCE least concentration endpoint
- Effects of pH
- Effects of salt
- Effects of other additives
45Flavor binding
- Proteins odorless
- Binding off-flavor components
- Carriers for desired flavors
- Structural dependence
46Dough formation
- S-S formation
- Hydroxyl groups
- Hydrophobic interactions
47Nutritional value of proteins
- Nutritional value of protein
- Content of essential AA digestibility
- Essential AA
-
-
48Protein Digestibility
- Definition
- proportion of food nitrogen that is absorbed
after ingestion - Protein from animal source better digestibility
- Factors affect protein digestibility
- 1. protein conformation
- 2. antinutritional factors
- 3. binding with other food components
- 4. processing
49Loss of nutritional value
- Maillard reactions
- Oxidation of Met, Cys, Trp, and Tyr
- Free radical oxidation
-
- Effects of polyphenolics
50Chemistry of enzymes
- Enzymes proteins with catalytic activity due to
their power of specific activation and conversion
of substrates to products - Enzyme catalysis
-
- ? rates of reactions (by 103 to 1011)
- high selectivity or specificity
51Food Enzymes
- Biological catalysts
- Proteins (can be denatured)
- Specific (can be inhibited)
intermediate
Enzyme stabilized intermediate
DG
Substrate
Product
reaction
52Polyphenol oxidase
- Founds in plants, animals and some
microorganisms, requires Cu2, O2
diphenol
phenol
MELANINS
diphenol
catechol
53Lipoxygenase
- Catalyzes peroxidation of fatty acids
- Abstracts an H., allows reaction with O2, free
radicals produced - Leads to rancidity and flavor
- Co-oxidations
- Bleaching flour
- Thiols
- Vitamins
54Amylase
a-amylase (endo-splitting)
glucoamylase
Starch Dextrins Glucose
Highly viscous suspension of polymerized corn
starch
Glucose isomerase
Fructose
105C