Modulating surface rheology by electrostatic protein/polysaccharide interactions

被引:101
|
作者
Ganzevles, Renate A.
Zinoviadou, Kyriaki
van Vliet, Ton
Stuart, Martien A. Cohen
de Jongh, Harmen H. J.
机构
[1] Wageningen Ctr Food Sci, NL-6700 AN Wageningen, Netherlands
[2] Wageningen Univ, Lab Phys Chem & Colloid Sci, Dept Agrotechnol & Food Sci, NL-6700 EK Wageningen, Netherlands
[3] Wageningen Univ, Dept Agrotechnol & Food Sci, NL-6700 EV Wageningen, Netherlands
[4] TNO, Qual Life, NL-3700 AJ Zeist, Netherlands
关键词
D O I
10.1021/la061537e
中图分类号
O6 [化学];
学科分类号
0703 ;
摘要
There is a large interest in mixed protein/polysaccharide layers at air-water and oil-water interfaces because of their ability to stabilize foams and emulsions. Mixed protein/polysaccharide adsorbed layers at air-water interfaces can be prepared either by adsorption of soluble protein/polysaccharide complexes or by sequential adsorption of complexes or polysaccharides to a previously formed protein layer. Even though the final protein and polysaccharide bulk concentrations are the same, the behavior of the adsorbed layers can be very different, depending on the method of preparation. The surface shear modulus of a sequentially formed beta-lactoglobulin/pectin layer can be up to a factor of 6 higher than that of a layer made by simultaneous adsorption. Furthermore, the surface dilatational modulus and surface shear modulus strongly (up to factors of 2 and 7, respectively) depend on the bulk beta-lactoglobulin/pectin mixing ratio. On the basis of the surface rheological behavior, a mechanistic understanding of how the structure of the adsorbed layers depends on the protein/polysaccharide interaction in bulk solution, mixing ratio, ionic strength, and order of adsorption to the interface (simultaneous or sequential) is derived. Insight into the effect of protein/polysaccharide interactions on the properties of adsorbed layers provides a solid basis to modulate surface rheological behavior.
引用
收藏
页码:10089 / 10096
页数:8
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