Author:
Downey W. K.,Murphy R. F.
Abstract
SummaryThe temperature-dependent dissociation of β-casein from the casein micelles of milk and from the soluble casein complexes of colloidal phosphate-free (CPF) milk was investigated by high-speed centrifugation and gel-filtration. The percentage of the total casein in supernatants prepared by high-speed centrifugation of mid-lactation milks increased from approximately 6 to 15% on cooling the milks from 30 to 5 °C; β-casein accounted for about 46% of this increase, while αs-and κ-casein constituted 30 and 23%, respectively. On gel-filtration both of skim-milk and CPF milk on Sepharose 2B at 0, 2, 5, 10 and 25 °C, maximum amounts of free β-casein (c. 60% of total) were obtained at 5 °C. The remainder of the β-casein appeared to be more strongly bound to the αs- and κ-casein and may be involved in the internal cohesion of casein micelles. The free β-casein of both milk preparations appeared to be in equilibrium with the bound β-casein. On Sephadex G-200 columns at 5 °C, approximately 5 and 60% of the β-casein of skim-milk and CPF milk, respectively, was eluted in the free form in the expected position for a globular protein of molecular weight about 200000. At low temperatures, particularly at 5 °C, colloidal phosphate appeared to play an integrating role in the association of over half the total β-casein with the other casein components of native micelles. However, when the equilibrium between micellar and free β-casein was disturbed by gel-filtration on Sepharose 2B, the presence of colloidal phosphate did not prevent the release of most of the β-casein from casein micelles. Some problems encountered in the use of densitometry for the estimation of individual caseins on electropherograms are described.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science