4.3 Article

Impact of industrial cream heat treatments on the protein composition of the milk fat globule membrane

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY RESEARCH
Volume 87, Issue 1, Pages 89-93

Publisher

CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1017/S0022029919000955

Keywords

Cream; milk fat globule membrane; pasteurization; processing

Funding

  1. Arla Foods for Health
  2. Innovation Fund Denmark [5158-00014B]
  3. Arla Food Ingredients

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The impact of cream processing on milk fat globule membrane (MFGM) was assessed in an industrial setting for the first time. Three creams and their derived MFGM fractions from different stages of the pasteurization procedure at a butter dairy were investigated and compared to a native control as well as a commercial MFGM fraction. The extent of cross-linking of serum proteins to MFGM proteins increased progressively with each consecutive pasteurization step. Unresolved high molecular weight aggregates were found to consist of both indigenous MFGM proteins and beta-lactoglobulin as well as alpha(s1)- and beta-casein. With regards to fat globule stability and in terms of resistance towards coalescence and flocculation after cream washing, single-pasteurized cream exhibited reduced sensitivity to cream washing compared to non- and double-pasteurized creams. Inactivation of the agglutination mechanism and the increased presence of non-MFGM proteins may determine this balance between stable and non-stable fat globules.

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