4.7 Article

Bacterial proteolysis of casein leading to UHT milk gelation: An applicative study

Journal

FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 292, Issue -, Pages 217-226

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2019.04.066

Keywords

Milk gelation; Caseinomacropeptides; AprX; Psychrotrophic bacteria; Capillary zone electrophoresis

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Heat-stable peptidases released in refrigerated raw milk by psychrotrophic bacteria are responsible for UHT milk gelation. K-casein-derived caseinomacropeptides, identified by mass spectrometry, were constantly detected in gelled milk by capillary electrophoresis. Strains of Pseudomonas fluorescens, Ps. poae and Chryseobacterium joostei, selected among aprX-positive strains from raw milk, were incubated in milk up to 6 days at 4 degrees C before sterilization (98 degrees C/4 min). Samples were then stored at 25 or 40 degrees C, visually observed for gelation, and analysed for presence of caseinomacropeptides throughout 90 days of storage. Depending on cold pre-incubation time, caseinomacropeptides accumulated well before gelation onset in milk stored at 25 degrees C. Caseinomacropeptides were successively degraded, especially in milk stored at 40 degrees C, due to extensive proteolysis, and an abundant sediment developed instead of a gel. The caseinomacropeptides are here presented as an early indicator of UHT milk gelation and a mechanism explaining this phenomenon is proposed.

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