4.7 Article

Impact of gastric coagulation on the kinetics of release of fat globules from milk of different species

Journal

FOOD & FUNCTION
Volume 12, Issue 4, Pages 1783-1802

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d0fo02870c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Tertiary Education Commission-Centre of Research Excellence (CoRE) funding, New Zealand

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The study revealed that during gastric digestion, fat globules in raw and pasteurized whole milks are initially trapped within curds, but are gradually released as digestion progresses. The release of fat globules from curds is dependent on the breakdown of the protein matrix, providing insights into controlled delivery of nutrients.
The behavior of fat globules during the gastric digestion of raw and pasteurized cow, goat, and sheep whole milks was studied using a human gastric simulator. Microstructural and physicochemical analysis revealed that, initially, the coagulation of the milks in the human gastric simulator resulted in the majority of the milk fat globules being entrapped within the curd. As the digestion progressed, the proportion of fat globules entrapped within the aggregated protein matrix (curd) decreased; there was also some flocculation as well as coalescence of the fat globules within the curd. The liberation of the entrapped fat globules from the curd to the liquid phase of the chyme was strongly dependent on the disintegration and hydrolysis of the structured casein network. Surprisingly, the fat globules released (or already present) into the liquid phase of the chyme were not as extensively coalesced as those remaining within the curd. These phenomena were observed to be similar for the raw and pasteurized whole milk of all species. The pasteurized whole milks from all species formed relatively less structured coagula compared with their raw milk counterparts, leading to a greater extent of protein breakdown and, thus, higher proportions of fat release from the pasteurized milk curds. This study provides a deeper understanding of how the curd-forming properties of different mammalian milks in the gastric environment provide controlled delivery of nutrients (such as protein and fat).

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