Author:
UDABAGE PUNSANDANI,McKINNON IAN R.,AUGUSTIN MARY-ANN
Abstract
We have investigated the effects of adding a range of mineral salts and
calcium-chelating agents on the distribution of casein and minerals between the non-pelleted and pelleted phases of milk obtained upon centrifugation at 78000 g for
90 min. Adding CaCl2 or mixtures of NaH2PO% and Na2HPO% to reconstituted skim
milk (90 g milk solids/kg) at pH 6·65 increased both pelleted casein and pelleted
calcium phosphate. Opposite effects were obtained by adding citrate or EDTA. The
change in pelleted calcium phosphate was not simply related to casein release from
the micelle. Upon adding 5 mmol EDTA/kg milk, 20% of the pelleted Ca, 22% of
the pelleted phosphate and 5% of the micellar casein were removed. Increasing the
concentration of EDTA to 10 mmol/kg milk decreased the pelleted Ca by 44% and
the pelleted phosphate by 46%, and caused 30%of the micellar casein to be released.
The effects of adding phosphate, citrate or EDTA at pH 6·65, followed by the
addition of CaCl2, demonstrated the reversibility of the dissolution and formation of
the micellar calcium phosphate. There were limits to this reversibility that were
related to the amount of colloidal calcium phosphate removed from the casein
micelles. Adding CaCl2 to milk containing [ges ] 20 mmol EDTA or [ges ] 30 mmol
citrate/kg milk did not result in complete reformation of casein micelles. Light-scattering experiments confirmed that the dissolution of moderate amounts of
colloidal calcium phosphate had little effect on micellar size and were reversible,
while the dissolution of larger amounts of colloidal calcium phosphate resulted in
large reductions in micellar size and was irreversible.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science
Cited by
132 articles.
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