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Polypeptide Profile, Amino Acid Composition and Some Functional Properties of Calabash Nutmeg ( Monodora myristica ) Flour and Protein Products
Author(s) -
Akinyede Adedamola I.,
Malomo Sunday A.,
Fagbemi Tayo N.,
Osundahunsi Oluwatooyin F.,
Aluko Rotimi E.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the american oil chemists' society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.512
H-Index - 117
eISSN - 1558-9331
pISSN - 0003-021X
DOI - 10.1007/s11746-017-3043-6
Subject(s) - chemistry , food science , globulin , albumin , composition (language) , nutmeg , solubility , chromatography , emulsion , biochemistry , biology , organic chemistry , linguistics , philosophy , immunology
The aim of this work was to compare the physicochemical and functional properties of calabash nutmeg ( Monodora myristica ) seed protein flour with those of protein‐enriched products (albumin, globulin, and protein isolate). Defatted M. myristica seed flour (MMF) was used to prepare various protein products. A NaCl extract of MMF was dialyzed against water to obtain the soluble albumin fraction (MMA) and a precipitated globulin fraction (MMG). MMF was also extracted with NaOH, the extract adjusted to pH 4.0 and the precipitated proteins collected as the isolate (MMI). Non‐reducing gel electrophoresis showed that the MMF, MMG and MMI had similar composition that was dominated by 55 and 110 kDa polypeptides while MMA consisted mainly of smaller (<35 kDa) polypeptides. However, under reducing conditions, the 110 kDa polypeptide was not observed. Amino acid composition revealed an Arg/Lys ratio that increased in the extracts (1.92, 2.28 and 2.11 for MMA, MMG and MMI, respectively) relative to that in MMF (1.85). MMA had 67.5–86.5% protein solubility in the pH 4.0–6.0 range while those of MMF, MMG, and MMI were 37.7–63.8, 2.7–69.4 and 3.8–55.1%, respectively. MMA, MMG and MMI were found to be better emulsifiers based on their smaller oil droplet sizes (8–14 μm) compared with the 14–33 μm for MMF emulsion. Maximum foaming capacity was highest for MMI (205%) when compared with MMA or MMG (150%) and MMF (89%). We conclude that protein enrichment led to significantly enhanced emulsion and foam‐forming properties but high solubility may have contributed to reduced emulsion stability.