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Effect of Heat Treatment on Protein Self-Digestion in Ruminants' Milk.

Juliana A S LeiteCarlos A MontoyaEvelyne MaesCharles A HeferRaul A P A CruzNicole C RoyWarren C McNabb
Published in: Foods (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
This study investigated whether heat treatments (raw, 63 °C for 30 min, and 85 °C for 5 min) affect protein hydrolysis by endogenous enzymes in the milk of ruminants (bovine, ovine, and caprine) using a self-digestion model. Self-digestion consisted of the incubation for six hours at 37 °C of the ruminants' milk. Free amino group concentration was measured by the o -phthaldialdehyde method, and peptide sequences were identified by chromatography-mass spectrometry. Results showed that heat treatments prior to self-digestion decreased the free NH 2 by 59% in bovine milk heated at 85 °C/5 min, and by 44 and 53% in caprine milk heated at 63 °C/30 min and 85 °C/5 min, respectively. However, after self-digestion, only new free amino groups were observed for the raw and heated at 63 °C/30 min milk. β-Casein was the most cleaved protein in the raw and heated at 63 °C/30 min bovine milk. A similar trend was observed in raw ovine and caprine milk. Self-digestion increased 6.8-fold the potential antithrombin peptides in the bovine milk heated at 63 °C/30 min. Enhancing bioactive peptide abundance through self-digestion has potential applications in the industry for functional products. Overall, heat treatments affected the free amino groups according to the species and heat treatment applied, which was reflected in the varying degrees of cleaved peptide bonds and peptides released during self-digestion.
Keyphrases
  • anaerobic digestion
  • mass spectrometry
  • heat stress
  • amino acid
  • ms ms
  • small molecule
  • high speed
  • tandem mass spectrometry
  • simultaneous determination