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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry Année : 2006

Hen egg yolk low-density lipoproteins film spreading at the air-water and oil-water interfaces

Résumé

Hen egg yolk is largely used as an ingredient in food emulsions due to its exceptional emulsifying properties. Low- density lipoproteins ( LDL) are the main egg yolk constituents and the most important contributors to yolk emulsifying properties. To better understand the LDL adsorption mechanism and spreading at the interface, we extracted and studied LDL at different interfaces. At the air- water interface, the LDL film isotherm presents three transitions, and two were identified by each lipid class present in LDL. The last transition should be due to apoproteins- lipids complexes. During LDL adsorption, the presence of apoproteins at the LDL surface and the neutral lipid core is necessary. At pH 3 and pH 7, LDL are disrupted and spread quasi- similarly at the air- water interface, contrary to the oil- water interface where LDL spread more at pH 7 than at pH 3.

Dates et versions

hal-02663809 , version 1 (31-05-2020)

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Citer

Stephanie Dauphas, Valerie Beaumal, Alain Riaublanc, Marc Anton. Hen egg yolk low-density lipoproteins film spreading at the air-water and oil-water interfaces. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2006, 54 (10), pp.3733-3737. ⟨10.1021/jf053174e⟩. ⟨hal-02663809⟩

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