Published January 1, 2011 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Protein network structure and properties of wheat gluten extrudates using a novel solvent-free approach with urea as a combined denaturant and plasticiser

  • 1. KTH Royal Inst Technol, SE-10044 Stockholm, Sweden
  • 2. Innventia, SE-11486 Stockholm, Sweden
  • 3. Swedish Univ Agr Sci, Fac Landscape Planning Hort & Agr Sci, SE-23053 Alnarp, Sweden

Description

This is, to our knowledge, the first success on solvent-free extrusion of wheat gluten (WG) into high quality films without using NaOH/salicylic acid. It was possible by using urea (concentrations: 10, 15 and 20 wt%) in the single screw-extruder process. Tensile testing, oxygen permeability, water vapor transmission rate, infrared spectroscopy (IR), confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) and protein solubility were used to assess the properties of the extrudates. As the urea concentration increased, the strength and stiffness decreased while the extensibility increased. The oxygen permeability was low and increased, as did the water vapor transmission rate, with increasing urea concentration. The protein solubility of urea-containing films was found to be significantly lower than that of the native gluten and glycerol-plasticized WG extrudate. CLSM, together with the protein solubility, indicated that the urea films were aggregated/polymerized and IR spectroscopy revealed that these films contained a sizeable amount of beta-sheets with a high degree of hydrogen bonds associated with protein aggregation. The aggregation did not change with increasing urea concentration, which suggests that the changes in the mechanical and permeability properties were due to urea-induced plasticisation.

Files

bib-145cab64-eb33-4660-b14b-299b5cb4f658.txt

Files (264 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:205c2c70177ccf3b251f877da49c32e8
264 Bytes Preview Download