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Protein Structure-Function Relationships in Foods

โœ Scribed by J. E. Kinsella, D. J. Rector, L. G. Phillips (auth.), R. Y. Yada, R. L. Jackman, J. L. Smith (eds.)


Publisher
Springer US
Year
1994
Tongue
English
Leaves
213
Edition
1
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


Food proteins constitute a diverse and complex collection of biological macroยญ molecules. Although contributing to the nutritional quality of the foods we conยญ sume, proteins also act as integral components by virtue of their diverse functional properties. The expression of these functional properties during the preparation, processing and storage of foods is largely dictated by changes to the structure or structure-related properties of the proteins involved. Therefore, germane to the optimal use of existing and future food protein sources is a thorough understanding of the nature of the relationships between structure and function. It is the goal of this book to aid in better defining these relationships. Two distinct sections are apparent: firstly, those chapters which address strucยญ ture-function relationships using a variety of food systems as examples to demonstrate the intricacies of this relationship, and secondly, those chapters which discuss techniques used to either examine structural parameters or aid in establishing quantitative relationships between protein structure and function. The editors would like to thank all contributors for their assistance, co-operation and, above all, their patience in putting this volume together, and the following companies/organizations for their financial support without which it would not have been the success it was: Ault Foods Limited, Best Foods Canada Limited, Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, Quest International Canada Inc., and University of Guelph. R.Y.Y. R.LJ.

โœฆ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xi
Physicochemical properties of proteins: Texturization via gelation, glass and film formation....Pages 1-21
Microstructure of protein gels related to functionality....Pages 22-42
Probing structural changes and preparation of protein domains by limited proteolysis....Pages 43-61
Control of polyphenol oxidase activity using a catalytic mechanism....Pages 62-88
Naturally occurring ฮฑ-amylase inhibitors: Structure/function relationships....Pages 89-119
Application of multivariate analysis in studies of food protein functions....Pages 120-142
Surface adsorption of dairy proteins: Fouling of model surfaces....Pages 143-162
Raman spectroscopy as a probe of protein structure in food systems....Pages 163-197
Back Matter....Pages 198-202

โœฆ Subjects


Food Science; Physical Chemistry; Industrial Chemistry/Chemical Engineering


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