화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.119, No.23, 7077-7086, 2015
Quantification of Protein Hydration, Glass Transitions, and Structural Relaxations of Aqueous Protein and Carbohydrate-Protein Systems
Water distribution and miscibility of carbohydrate and protein components in biological materials and their structural,, contributions in concentrated solids are poorly understood. In the present study, structural relaxations and a glass transition of protein hydration water and antiplasticization of the hydration water at low temperatures were measured using dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) for bovine Whey protein, (BWP), aqueous glucose-fructose (GF), and their mixture. Thermal transitions of alpha-lactalbumin and beta-lactoglobulin components, of BWP included water-content-dependent endothermic but reversible dehydration and denaturation, and exothermic and irreversible aggregation. An alpha-relaxation assigned to hydration water in BWP appeared at water-content-dependent temperatures and increased to over the range of 150-200 K at decreasing water content and in the presence of GF. Two separate glass transitions and individual fractions of unfrozen water of ternary GF-BWP water systems contributed to uncoupled alpha-relaxations, suggesting different roles of protein hydration water and carbohydrate verification in concentrated solids during freezing and dehydration. Hydration water in the BWP fraction of GP-BWP systems was derived from equilibrium water sorption and, glass transition data of the GF fraction, which gave a significant universal method to quantify protein-hydration water and (ii) the unfrozen water in protein carbohydrate systems for such applications as cryopreservation, freezing, lyophilization, and dehydration of biological materials:A ternary supplemented phase diagram (state diagram) established for the GF-BWP-water system can be used for the analysis of the water distribution across carbohydrate and protein components in such applications.