Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones

The focus on natural foods and “clean” labeled products is increasing and encourages development of new biobased ingredients. Fish solubles derived from downstream processing of side stream materials in the fish filleting industries have potential as emulsifiers based on their surface-active and emu...

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Published in:Foods
Main Authors: Silje Steinsholm, Åge Oterhals, Jarl Underhaug, Tone Aspevik
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10010038
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spelling ftmdpi:oai:mdpi.com:/2304-8158/10/1/38/ 2023-08-20T04:05:12+02:00 Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones Silje Steinsholm Åge Oterhals Jarl Underhaug Tone Aspevik agris 2020-12-25 application/pdf https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10010038 EN eng Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Food Physics and (Bio)Chemistry https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10010038 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Foods; Volume 10; Issue 1; Pages: 38 enzymatic protein hydrolysates emulsion activity critical micelle concentration fish by-products emulsion stability Text 2020 ftmdpi https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10010038 2023-08-01T00:43:57Z The focus on natural foods and “clean” labeled products is increasing and encourages development of new biobased ingredients. Fish solubles derived from downstream processing of side stream materials in the fish filleting industries have potential as emulsifiers based on their surface-active and emulsion stabilizing properties. The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare emulsion properties and critical micelle concentration (CMC) of direct protein extracts and protein hydrolysates based on fish backbones, and to identify associations between molecular weight distribution and process yield with the studied physicochemical properties. Protein extracts and enzymatic protein hydrolysates were produced based on two raw materials (cod and salmon backbones), two enzymes with different proteolytic specificity, and varying hydrolysis time. Emulsion activity index (EAI), emulsion stability index (ESI) and CMC were measured and compared with casein as a reference to protein-based emulsifiers. Protein hydrolysis was found to have negative impact on EAI and CMC, likely due to generation of small peptides disrupting the amphiphilic balance. The direct protein extracts had comparable EAI with casein, but the latter had superior ESI values. Protein hydrolysates with acceptable EAI could only be obtained at the expense of product yield. The study emphasizes the complexity of physicochemical properties of protein hydrolysates and discusses the challenges of achieving both good surface-active properties and high product yield. Text atlantic cod Atlantic salmon MDPI Open Access Publishing Foods 10 1 38
institution Open Polar
collection MDPI Open Access Publishing
op_collection_id ftmdpi
language English
topic enzymatic protein hydrolysates
emulsion activity
critical micelle concentration
fish by-products
emulsion stability
spellingShingle enzymatic protein hydrolysates
emulsion activity
critical micelle concentration
fish by-products
emulsion stability
Silje Steinsholm
Åge Oterhals
Jarl Underhaug
Tone Aspevik
Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones
topic_facet enzymatic protein hydrolysates
emulsion activity
critical micelle concentration
fish by-products
emulsion stability
description The focus on natural foods and “clean” labeled products is increasing and encourages development of new biobased ingredients. Fish solubles derived from downstream processing of side stream materials in the fish filleting industries have potential as emulsifiers based on their surface-active and emulsion stabilizing properties. The aim of this study was to evaluate and compare emulsion properties and critical micelle concentration (CMC) of direct protein extracts and protein hydrolysates based on fish backbones, and to identify associations between molecular weight distribution and process yield with the studied physicochemical properties. Protein extracts and enzymatic protein hydrolysates were produced based on two raw materials (cod and salmon backbones), two enzymes with different proteolytic specificity, and varying hydrolysis time. Emulsion activity index (EAI), emulsion stability index (ESI) and CMC were measured and compared with casein as a reference to protein-based emulsifiers. Protein hydrolysis was found to have negative impact on EAI and CMC, likely due to generation of small peptides disrupting the amphiphilic balance. The direct protein extracts had comparable EAI with casein, but the latter had superior ESI values. Protein hydrolysates with acceptable EAI could only be obtained at the expense of product yield. The study emphasizes the complexity of physicochemical properties of protein hydrolysates and discusses the challenges of achieving both good surface-active properties and high product yield.
format Text
author Silje Steinsholm
Åge Oterhals
Jarl Underhaug
Tone Aspevik
author_facet Silje Steinsholm
Åge Oterhals
Jarl Underhaug
Tone Aspevik
author_sort Silje Steinsholm
title Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones
title_short Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones
title_full Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones
title_fullStr Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones
title_full_unstemmed Emulsion and Surface-Active Properties of Fish Solubles Based on Direct Extraction and after Hydrolysis of Atlantic Cod and Atlantic Salmon Backbones
title_sort emulsion and surface-active properties of fish solubles based on direct extraction and after hydrolysis of atlantic cod and atlantic salmon backbones
publisher Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
publishDate 2020
url https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10010038
op_coverage agris
genre atlantic cod
Atlantic salmon
genre_facet atlantic cod
Atlantic salmon
op_source Foods; Volume 10; Issue 1; Pages: 38
op_relation Food Physics and (Bio)Chemistry
https://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods10010038
op_rights https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
op_doi https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10010038
container_title Foods
container_volume 10
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