posted on 2012-12-04, 14:26authored byMalcolm J.W. Povey, Jonathan D. Moore, Julian Braybrook, Howard Simons, Ron Belchamber, Meera Raganathan, Valerie PinfieldValerie Pinfield
The ability of ultrasound spectroscopy to characterise protein denaturation at relatively high
concentrations and under conditions found in foods, is examined. Measurement of longitudinal sound
velocity against concentration and frequency (20-160 MHz) for the bovine serum albumin monomer at
pH 7.0 gave a frequency independent value for molecular compressibility of at 25 °C, corresponding to
a sound velocity for the BSA molecule of 1920 ms-1. At 160 MHz, the longitudinal sound attenuation in
BSA molecules is ~5200 Npm-1, a factor of 10 higher than in water. The excess attenuation of the
solution over water was nearly 90 Npm-1 at the highest measured volume fraction of 0.03 (or 3% v/v).
Concentration-dependent ultrasound velocity (20 - 160 MHz) and attenuation (2 - 120 MHz) spectra
were obtained over time for heated bovine serum albumin (BSA) solutions up to 40 mg/mL at neutral
pH and at 25 °C. An acoustic scattering model was used which considered the solute molecules as
scatterers of ultrasound, to determine the molecules' sound velocity, compressibility, and attenuation
properties. Mild heat treatment caused the molecule to organise into dimers and trimers, without
change in sound velocity; implying that there is little or no change in secondary structure. Changes in
attenuation spectra correlated with estimated molecular weight as determined through DLS and SEC
measurements. During oligomerisation, the BSA molecules continue to behave acoustically as
monomers.
Under severe heat treatment, BSA rapidly suffered irreversible denaturation and gelation occurred
which affected both ultrasound attenuation spectra and the velocity of sound, consistent with
significant molecular conformation changes and/or molecule-molecule interactions.
History
School
Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering
Department
Chemical Engineering
Citation
POVEY, M.J.W., MOORE, J.D., BRAYBROOK, J. ... et al, 2011. Investigation of bovine serum albumin denaturation using ultrasonic spectroscopy. Food Hydrocolloids, 25 (5), pp.1233-1241.
This is the author’s version of a work that was accepted for publication in the journal Food Hydrocolloids. Changes resulting from the publishing process, such as peer review, editing, corrections, structural formatting, and other quality control mechanisms may not be reflected in this document. Changes may have been made to this work since it was submitted for publication. A definitive version was subsequently published at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.foodhyd.2010.11.011