The effect of lactose and its isomerization product lactulose on functional and structural properties of glycated casein

[Display omitted] •The reactivity of lactulose with casein is higher than lactose.•Lactulose causes more structural changes of casein than lactose.•Lactulose significantly causes casein aggregation.•Reaction of lactulose with casein reduces casein functionality. Lactulose is an isomer of lactose, fo...

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Published inFood research international Vol. 168; p. 112683
Main Authors Kong, Yiru, Dong, Qi, Yu, Ziyin, Yan, Haixia, Liu, Ling, Shen, Yixiao
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Canada Elsevier Ltd 01.06.2023
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Summary:[Display omitted] •The reactivity of lactulose with casein is higher than lactose.•Lactulose causes more structural changes of casein than lactose.•Lactulose significantly causes casein aggregation.•Reaction of lactulose with casein reduces casein functionality. Lactulose is an isomer of lactose, formed under thermal processing of milk. Alkaline conditions favor the isomerization of lactose. As reducing sugar, lactose and lactulose could participate in the Maillard reaction and cause protein glycation in milk products. In this study, the influence of lactose and lactulose on the functional and structural properties of glycated casein was investigated. The results demonstrated that compared with lactose, lactulose led to severer changes in molecular weight, more disordered spatial structure and decrease of tryptophan fluorescence intensity of casein. Besides, the glycation degree and advanced glycation end products (AGEs) results suggested that lactulose exhibited stronger glycation ability than lactose due to the higher proportion of open chain in solution. Furthermore, higher glycation degree induced by lactulose resulted in lower solubility, surface hydrophobicity, digestibility and emulsifying capacity of casein-glycoconjugates compared with lactose. The results of this study are essential for tracking the effects of harmful Maillard reaction products on the quality of milk and dairy products.
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ISSN:0963-9969
1873-7145
DOI:10.1016/j.foodres.2023.112683