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Influence of collagen and some proteins on gel properties of jellyfish gelatin
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Document Title
Influence of collagen and some proteins on gel properties of jellyfish gelatin
Author
Lueyot A., Rungsardthong V., Vatanyoopaisarn S., Hutangura P., Wonganu B., Wongsa-Ngasri P., Charoenlappanit S., Roytrakul S., Thumthanaruk B.
Name from Authors Collection
Affiliations
Department of Agro-Industrial, Food, and Environmental Technology, Faculty of Applied Science, KingMongkut’s University of Technology North Bangkok, Bangsue, Bangkok, Thailand; Department ofBiotechnology, Faculty of Applied Science, King Mongkut’s University of Technology North Bangkok, Bangsue, Bangkok, Thailand; Fishery Technological Development Division, Department of Fisheries, Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, Chatuchak, Bangkok, Thailand; Functional Ingredients and FoodInnovation Research Group, National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology, National Scienceand Technology Development Agency, Klong Luang, Pathumthani, Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
PLoS ONE
ISSN
19326203
Year
2021
Volume
16
Issue
6-มิ.ย.
Open Access
Gold, Green
Publisher
Public Library of Science
DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0253254
Abstract
Marine gelatin is one of the food proteins used in food and non-food products, offering desirable functionalities such as gelling, thickening, and binding. Jellyfish has been chosen for this gelatin research, in view of the benefits of its main collagen protein and lower fat content, which may reduce the amounts of chemicals used in the preparative steps of gelatin production. To date, the lack of identified proteins in gelatin has limited the understanding of differentiating intrinsic factors quantitatively and qualitatively affecting gel properties. No comparison has been made between marine gelatin of fish and that of jellyfish, regarding protein type and distribution differences. Therefore, the study aimed at characterizing jellyfish gelatin extracted from by-products, that are i.e., pieces that have broken off during the grading and cleaning step of salted jellyfish processing. Different pretreatment by hydrochloric acid (HCl) concentrations (0.1 and 0.2 M) and hot water extraction time (12 and 24 h) were studied as factors in jellyfish gelatin extraction. The resultant jellyfish gelatin with the highest gel strength (JFG1), as well as two commercial gelatins of fish gelatin (FG) and bovine gelatin (BG), were analyzed by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). The results show that the jellyfish gelatin (JFG1) extracted with 0.1 M HCl at 60C for 12 h delivered a maximum gel strength of 323.74 g, which is lower than for FG and BG, exhibiting 640.65 and 540.06 g, respectively. The gelling and melting temperatures of JFG1 were 7.1C and 20.5C, displaying a cold set gel and unstable gel at room temperature, whereas the gelling and melting temperatures of FG and BG were 17.4C, 21.3C, and 27.5C, 32.7C, respectively. Proteomic analysis shows that 29 proteins, of which 10 are types of collagen proteins and 19 are non-collagen proteins, are common to all BG, FG, and JFG1, and that JFG1 is missing 3 other collagen proteins (collagen alpha-2 (XI chain), collagen alpha-2 (I chain), and collagen alpha-2 (IV chain), that are important to gel networks. Thus, the lack of these 3 collagen types influences the inferior gel properties of jellyfish gelatin. Copyright: © 2021 Lueyot et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Industrial Classification
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 1
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 2
Knowledge Taxonomy Level 3
License
CC BY
Rights
Author
Publication Source
Scopus