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Paper Title

Production of biologically active peptides by hydrolysis of whey protein isolates using hydrodynamic cavitation

Authors

Aniruddha Bhalchandra Pandit
Aniruddha Bhalchandra Pandit
Rekha S Singhal
Rekha S Singhal
Abhijeet Bhimrao Muley
Abhijeet Bhimrao Muley

Keywords

  • Hydrodynamic Cavitation
  • Whey Protein Hydrolysis
  • Biologically Active Peptides
  • Whey Protein Isolate (WPI)
  • Protein Solubility Enhancement
  • Hydrolysis Optimization
  • Operating Pressure
  • Number of Passes
  • WPI Concentration
  • Full Factorial Design
  • Protein Binding Capacity
  • SDS-PAGE Analysis
  • Particle Size Analysis
  • Spectroscopic Characterization
  • Thermal Properties
  • Crystallinity Analysis
  • Antioxidant Assays
  • ABTS Assay
  • DPPH Assay
  • FRAP Assay
  • Sugarcane Growth Enhancement
  • Chlorophyll Content
  • Carotenoids
  • Reducing Sugars
  • Total Soluble Sugars
  • Soluble Proteins
  • Total Phenolics
  • Process Cost Analysis

Article Type

Research Article

Research Impact Tools

Issue

Volume : 71 | Page No : 105385

Published On

March, 2021

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Abstract

Whey protein isolate (WPI) hydrolysates have higher solubility in aqueous phase and enhanced biological properties. Hydrolysis of WPI was optimized using operating pressure (ΔP, bar), number of passes (N), and WPI concentration (C, %) as deciding parameters in hydrodynamic cavitation treatment. The optimum conditions for generation of WPI hydrolysate with full factorial design were 8 bar, 28 passes, and 4.5% WPI concentration yielding 32.69 ± 1.22 mg/mL soluble proteins. WPI hydrolysate showed alterations in binding capacity over WPI. SDS-PAGE and particle size analysis confirmed the hydrolysis of WPI. Spectroscopic, thermal and crystallinity analyses showed typical properties of proteins with slight variations after hydrodynamic cavitation treatment. ABTS, DPPH and FRAP assays of WPI hydrolysate showed 7–66, 9–149, and 0.038–0.272 µmol/mL GAE at 1–10, 0.25–4, and 3–30 mg/mL concentration, respectively. Further, a considerable enhancement in fresh weight, chlorophyll, carotenoids, reducing sugars, total soluble sugars, soluble proteins content and total phenolics content was noticed during in vitro growth of sugarcane in WPI hydrolysate supplemented medium at 50–200 mg/L concentration over the control. The process cost (INR/kg) to hydrolyze WPI was also calculated.

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