Journal Articles
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://mro.massey.ac.nz/handle/10179/7915
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Item Digestion of food proteins: the role of pepsin.(Taylor and Francis Group, 2025-01-21) Yang M; Yang Z; Everett DW; Gilbert EP; Singh H; Ye AThe nutritive value of a protein is determined not only by its amino acid composition, but also by its digestibility in the gastrointestinal tract. The interaction between proteins and pepsin in the gastric stage is the first step and plays an important role in protein hydrolysis. Moreover, it affects the amino acid release rates and the allergenicity of the proteins. The interaction between pepsin and proteins from different food sources is highly dependent on the protein species, composition, processing treatment, and the presence of other food components. Coagulation of milk proteins under gastric conditions to form a coagulum is a unique behavior that affects gastric emptying and further hydrolysis of proteins. The processing treatment of proteins, either from milk or other sources, may change their structure, interactions with pepsin, and allergenicity. For example, the heat treatment of milk proteins results in the formation of a looser curd in the gastric phase and facilitates protein digestion by pepsin. Heated meat proteins undergo denaturation and conformational changes that enhance the rate of pepsin digestion. This review provides new ideas for the design of food products containing high protein concentrations that optimize nutrition while facilitating low allergenicity for consumers.Item Dynamic In Vitro Gastric Digestion of Sheep Milk: Influence of Homogenization and Heat Treatment(MDPI (Basel, Switzerland), 2021-08-20) Pan Z; Ye A; Li S; Dave A; Fraser K; Singh H; Velickovic TCMilk is commonly exposed to processing including homogenization and thermal treatment before consumption, and this processing could have an impact on its digestion behavior in the stomach. In this study, we investigated the in vitro gastric digestion behavior of differently processed sheep milks. The samples were raw, pasteurized (75 °C/15 s), homogenized (200/20 bar at 65 °C)-pasteurized, and homogenized-heated (95 °C/5 min) milks. The digestion was performed using a dynamic in vitro gastric digestion system, the human gastric simulator with simulated gastric fluid without gastric lipase. The pH, structure, and composition of the milks in the stomach and the emptied digesta, and the rate of protein hydrolysis were examined. Curds formed from homogenized and heated milk had much looser and more fragmented structures than those formed from unhomogenized milk; this accelerated the curd breakdown, protein digestion and promoted the release of protein, fat, and calcium from the curds into the digesta. Coalescence and flocculation of fat globules were observed during gastric digestion, and most of the fat globules were incorporated into the emptied protein/peptide particles in the homogenized milks. The study provides a better understanding of the gastric emptying and digestion of processed sheep milk under in vitro gastric conditions.Item Kinetics of pepsin-induced hydrolysis and the coagulation of milk proteins(Elsevier Inc and the Federation of Animal Science Societies on behalf of the American Dairy Science Association, 2022-02) Yang M; Ye A; Yang Z; Everett DW; Gilbert EP; Singh HHydrolysis-induced coagulation of casein micelles by pepsin occurs during the digestion of milk. In this study, the effect of pH (6.7–5.3) and pepsin concentration (0.110–2.75 U/mL) on the hydrolysis of κ-casein and the coagulation of the casein micelles in bovine skim milk was investigated at 37°C using reverse-phase HPLC, oscillatory rheology, and confocal laser scanning microscopy. The hydrolysis of κ-casein followed a combined kinetic model of first-order hydrolysis and putative pepsin denaturation. The hydrolysis rate increased with increasing pepsin concentration at a given pH, was pH dependent, and reached a maximum at pH ~6.0. Both the increase in pepsin concentration and decrease in pH resulted in a shorter coagulation time. The extent of κ-casein hydrolysis required for coagulation was independent of the pepsin concentration at a given pH and, because of the lower electrostatic repulsion between para-casein micelles at lower pH, decreased markedly from ~73% to ~33% when pH decreased from 6.3 to 5.3. In addition, the rheological properties and the microstructures of the coagulum were markedly affected by the pH and the pepsin concentration. The knowledge obtained from this study provides further understanding on the mechanism of milk coagulation, occurring at the initial stage of transiting into gastric conditions with high pH and low pepsin concentration.
