Journal Articles
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Item Heat-set gelation of milk- and fermentation-derived β-lactoglobulin variants(Elsevier Ltd, 2025-08) Pan Z; Kornet R; Hewitt S; Welman A; Hill JP; Wubbolts M; Mitchell S; McNabb WC; Ye A; Acevedo-Fani A; Anema SGMilk-derived β-lactoglobulin (mβ-LG) and fermentation-derived β-lactoglobulin (fβ-LG) may slightly differ in their amino acid sequences. This study aims to investigate the heat-set gelling behaviour of mβ-LG (variants A, B, and C) and fβ-LG A variants. Differential scanning calorimetry indicated similar denaturation temperatures for mβ-LG A and fβ-LG A (∼75 °C), with mβ-LG C highest (∼81 °C) and mβ-LG B intermediate (∼78 °C). All fβ-LG A formed translucent gels with a fine-stranded structure, whereas mβ-LG A, B, and C formed opaque gels with a coarse particulate structure. fβ-LG A exhibited delayed gelation onset and lower gel stiffness compared to mβ-LG A. Among mβ-LG's, mβ-LG A showed the highest gel stiffness, followed by mβ-LG B and then mβ-LG C. Rheological analysis showed that fβ-LG A gels were more elastic and ductile compared to mβ-LG A gels, indicated by smaller tan δ values and delayed increases in energy dissipation ratio at higher strain amplitude; mβ-LG B and mβ-LG C gels were less elastic but more ductile compared to mβ-LG A gels. The more elastic and ductile nature of fβ-LG A gels indicates their potential for applications requiring these specific textural properties. By selecting mβ-LG variants from milk and/or utilizing precision fermentation to engineer additional differences, it is possible to tailor the gelation characteristics of β-LG to meet specific functional requirements.Item β-Lactoglobulin nanofibrils: Effect of temperature on fibril formation kinetics, fibril morphology and the rheological properties of fibril dispersions(Elsevier Ltd, 2012-05) Loveday SM; Wang XL; Rao MA; Anema SG; Singh HAlmost all published studies of heat-induced b-lactoglobulin self-assembly into amyloid-like fibrils at low pH and low ionic strength have involved heating at 80 C, and the effect of heating temperature on self-assembly has received little attention. Here we heated b-lactoglobulin at pH 2 and 75 C, 80 C, 90 C, 100 C, 110 C or 120 C and investigated the kinetics of self-assembly (using Thioflavin T fluorescence), the morphology of fibrils, and the rheological properties of fibril dispersions. Self-assembly occurred at all temperatures tested. Thioflavin T fluorescence increased sigmoidally at all temperatures, however it decreased sharply with >3.3 h heating at 110 C and with >5 h heating at 120 C. The sharp decreases were attributed partly to local gelation, but destruction of fibrils may have occurred at 120 C. Thioflavin T fluorescence results indicated that maximal rates of fibril formation increased with increasing temperature, especially above 100 C, but fibril yield (maximum Thioflavin T fluorescence) was not affected by temperature. At 100 C and 110 C, fibrils were slightly shorter than at 80 C, but otherwise they looked very similar. Fibrils made by heating at 120 C for 1 h were also similar, but heating at 120 C for 8 h gave predominantly short fibrils, apparently the products of larger fibrils fragmenting. Heating at 100 C gave consistently higher viscosity than at 80 C, and heating for >2 h at 120 C decreased viscosity, which may have been linked with fibril fragmentation seen in micrographs.
