Title of article :
Identification of salivary proteins at oil–water interfaces stabilized by lysozyme and β-lactoglobulin
Author/Authors :
Silletti، نويسنده , , Erika and Vitorino، نويسنده , , Rui M.P. and Schipper، نويسنده , , Raymond and Amado، نويسنده , , Francisco M.L. and Vingerhoeds، نويسنده , , Monique H.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2010
Pages :
11
From page :
268
To page :
278
Abstract :
In this research, we investigated the interaction occurring between oil-in-water emulsion droplets, stabilized by different emulsifiers, i.e. lysozyme and β-lactoglobulin (β-lg), and salivary proteins (SPs) with a molecular mass (Mr) above about 10 kDa. Different techniques, i.e. infrared spectroscopy, Western blotting, PAS staining and SDS-PAGE coupled to MS, were employed for this purpose. This study demonstrated the interaction between several salivary proteins and the emulsifiers at the oil–water interfaces. In particular, results show that the high Mr mucin MUC5B was strongly bound to lysozyme stabilized emulsions, whereas β-lg stabilized emulsions associated with MUC7 and, moderately, with MUC5B. Furthermore, we observed that salivary proteins in the range Mr 10–100 kDa associated differently with emulsion droplets. A large majority of SPs was found to interact with lysozyme stabilized emulsion droplets whilst in case of β-lg stabilized emulsions, the SPs distribute more evenly between the fraction associated and non-associated with the droplets. A clear example is α-amylase (Mr ∼ 55 kDa) which predominantly associates with lysozyme stabilized emulsion droplets, but not with β-lg emulsion droplets. To conclude, our findings indicate that adsorption/association of salivary protein components onto the emulsion droplets is related to the type of emulsifying proteins at the oil–water interfaces and it is probably driven by the overall net charge at the dropletʹs oil–water interfaces, i.e. positive for lysozyme stabilized emulsions and negative for β-lactoglobulin stabilized emulsion at neutral pH.
Keywords :
Saliva , emulsions , Lysozyme , ?-lactoglobulin , 1D-MS , Western blotting , Mucins
Journal title :
Archives of Oral Biology
Serial Year :
2010
Journal title :
Archives of Oral Biology
Record number :
1805636
Link To Document :
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