Impact of cavitation on the structure and functional quality of extracted protein from food sources – An overview

被引:20
作者
Kamal H. [1 ,2 ]
Ali A. [1 ,2 ,4 ,5 ]
Manickam S. [3 ]
Le C.F. [1 ]
机构
[1] Centre of Excellence for Postharvest Biotechnology (CEPB), School of Biosciences, University of Nottingham Malaysia, Jalan Broga, Selangor Darul Ehsan, Semenyih
[2] Future Food Beacon of Excellence, Faculty of Science, University of Nottingham, Loughborough
[3] Petroleum and Chemical Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, University Technology Brunei, Jalan Tungku Link Gadong
[4] The UWA Institute of Agriculture, The University of Western Australia, Perth, 6001, WA
[5] Leaders Institute, 76 Park Road, Woolloongabba, 4102, QLD
关键词
Acoustic; Cavitation; Functional properties; Hydrodynamic; Protein; Structure;
D O I
10.1016/j.foodchem.2022.135071
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Increasing protein demands directly require additional resources to those presently and recurrently available. Emerging green technologies have witnessed an escalating interest in “Cavitation Processing” (CP) to ensure a non-invasive, non-ionizing and non-polluting extraction. The main intent of this review is to present an integrated summary of cavitation extraction methods specifically applied to food protein sources. Along with a comparative assessment carried out for each type of cavitation model, protein extraction yield and implications on the extracted protein's structural and functional properties. The basic principle of cavitation is due to the pressure shift in the liquid flow within milliseconds. Hence, cavitation emerges similar to boiling; however, unlike boiling (temperature change), cavitation occurs due to pressure change. Characterization and classification of sample type is also a prime candidate when considering the applications of cavitation models in food processing. Generally, acoustic and hydrodynamic cavitation is applied in food applications including extraction, brewing, microbial cell disruption, dairy processing, emulsification, fermentation, waste processing, crystallisation, mass transfer and production of bioactive peptides. Micro structural studies indicate that shear stress causes disintegration of hydrogen bonds and Van der Waals interactions result in the unfolding of the protein's secondary and/or tertiary structures. A change in the structure is not targeted but rather holistic and affects the physicochemical, functional, and nutritional properties. Cavitation assisted extraction of protein is typically studied at a laboratory scale. This highlights limitations against the application at an industrial scale to obtain potential commercial gains. © 2022 The Author(s)
引用
收藏
相关论文
共 140 条
[31]  
Duerkop M., Berger E., Durauer A., Jungbauer A., Impact of Cavitation, High Shear Stress and Air/Liquid Interfaces on Protein Aggregation, Biotechnology Journal, 13, 7, pp. 1-9, (2018)
[32]  
Escobedo-Avellaneda Z., Pateiro-Moure M., Chotyakul N., Torres J.A., Welti-Chanes J., Perez-Lamela C., Benefits and limitations of food processing by high-pressure technologies: Effects on functional compounds and abiotic contaminants, CYTA - Journal of Food, 9, 4, pp. 351-364, (2011)
[33]  
Ferrari A., Fluid dynamics of acoustic and hydrodynamic cavitation in hydraulic power systems, Proceedings of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences, 473, 2199, (2017)
[34]  
Franca-Oliveira G., Fornari T., Hernandez-Ledesma B., A review on the extraction and processing of natural source-derived proteins through eco-innovative approaches, Processes, 9, 9, (2021)
[35]  
Fuchs R.H.B., Colla E., Canan C., Bernardi S., Kalschne D.L., Menegotto A.L.L., Barin J.S., Feasibility of ultrasound-assisted optimized process of high purity rice bran protein extraction, Ciencia Rural, 50, 12, pp. 1-13, (2020)
[36]  
Gallo M., Ferrara L., Naviglio D., Application of ultrasound in food science and technology: A perspective, Foods, 7, 10, pp. 1-18, (2018)
[37]  
Georganas A., Giamouri E., Pappas A.C., Papadomichelakis G., Galliou F., Manios T., Zervas G., Bioactive compounds in food waste: A review on the transformation of food waste to animal feed, Foods, 9, 3, pp. 1-18, (2020)
[38]  
Ghosh S., Gillis A., Sheviryov J., Levkov K., Golberg A., Towards waste meat biorefinery: Extraction of proteins from waste chicken meat with non-thermal pulsed electric fields and mechanical pressing, Journal of Cleaner Production, 208, pp. 220-231, (2019)
[39]  
Gonzalez-Tello P., Camacho F., Guadix E.M., Luzon G., Gonzalez P.A., Density, viscosity and surface tension of whey protein concentrate solutions, Journal of Food Process Engineering, 32, 2, pp. 235-247, (2009)
[40]  
Grosso C., Valentao P., Ferreres F., Andrade P.B., Alternative and efficient extraction methods for marine-derived compounds, Marine Drugs, 13, 5, pp. 3182-3230, (2015)