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Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods

Gelatin derived from marine by-products could be an interesting alternative to classic mammalian gelatin. The pretreatment and extraction conditions could influence the size of the resulting peptide chains and therefore their techno-functional properties. Thus, it is important to optimize the produc...

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Autores principales: Salem, Ali, Abdelhedi, Ola, Sebii, Haifa, Ben Taheur, Fadia, Fakhfakh, Nahed, Jridi, Mourad, Zouari, Nacim, Debeaufort, Frederic
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10558885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37809726
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e19620
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author Salem, Ali
Abdelhedi, Ola
Sebii, Haifa
Ben Taheur, Fadia
Fakhfakh, Nahed
Jridi, Mourad
Zouari, Nacim
Debeaufort, Frederic
author_facet Salem, Ali
Abdelhedi, Ola
Sebii, Haifa
Ben Taheur, Fadia
Fakhfakh, Nahed
Jridi, Mourad
Zouari, Nacim
Debeaufort, Frederic
author_sort Salem, Ali
collection PubMed
description Gelatin derived from marine by-products could be an interesting alternative to classic mammalian gelatin. The pretreatment and extraction conditions could influence the size of the resulting peptide chains and therefore their techno-functional properties. Thus, it is important to optimize the production process to get a gelatin for the appropriate applications. Skin pretreatment was done by microwaves or oven-drying and the extracted gelatin was dried by spray- or freeze-drying. Freeze-dried gelatin extracted from untreated skin (FGUS) had the highest gelatin yield (10.40%). Gelatin proximate composition showed that proteins were the major component (87.12–89.95%), while lipids showed the lowest contents (0.65–2.26%). Glycine showed the highest level (299–316/1000 residues) in the extracted gelatins. Proline and hydroxyproline residues of gelatins from untreated skin were significantly higher than those from pretreated skin-gelatin. FTIR spectra were characterized by peaks of the amide A (3430-3284 cm(−1)), B (3000-2931 cm(−1)), I (1636–1672 cm(−1)), II (1539–1586 cm(−1)) and III (1000–1107 cm(−1)). Spray-drying decreased the gelling properties of gelatins, since it reduced gelling and melting temperatures compared to freeze-drying. Skin pretreatment significantly reduced the gel strength of gelatin by about 50–100 g depending on the gelatin drying method. The FGUS showed better surface properties compared to other gelatins. The highest emulsion activity index (39.42 ± 1.02 m(2)/g) and foaming expansion (172.33 ± 2.35%) were measured at 3% FGUS. Therefore, the promising properties of freeze-dried gelatin derived from untreated skin, gave it the opportunity to be successfully used as a techno-functional ingredient in many formulations.
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spelling pubmed-105588852023-10-08 Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods Salem, Ali Abdelhedi, Ola Sebii, Haifa Ben Taheur, Fadia Fakhfakh, Nahed Jridi, Mourad Zouari, Nacim Debeaufort, Frederic Heliyon Research Article Gelatin derived from marine by-products could be an interesting alternative to classic mammalian gelatin. The pretreatment and extraction conditions could influence the size of the resulting peptide chains and therefore their techno-functional properties. Thus, it is important to optimize the production process to get a gelatin for the appropriate applications. Skin pretreatment was done by microwaves or oven-drying and the extracted gelatin was dried by spray- or freeze-drying. Freeze-dried gelatin extracted from untreated skin (FGUS) had the highest gelatin yield (10.40%). Gelatin proximate composition showed that proteins were the major component (87.12–89.95%), while lipids showed the lowest contents (0.65–2.26%). Glycine showed the highest level (299–316/1000 residues) in the extracted gelatins. Proline and hydroxyproline residues of gelatins from untreated skin were significantly higher than those from pretreated skin-gelatin. FTIR spectra were characterized by peaks of the amide A (3430-3284 cm(−1)), B (3000-2931 cm(−1)), I (1636–1672 cm(−1)), II (1539–1586 cm(−1)) and III (1000–1107 cm(−1)). Spray-drying decreased the gelling properties of gelatins, since it reduced gelling and melting temperatures compared to freeze-drying. Skin pretreatment significantly reduced the gel strength of gelatin by about 50–100 g depending on the gelatin drying method. The FGUS showed better surface properties compared to other gelatins. The highest emulsion activity index (39.42 ± 1.02 m(2)/g) and foaming expansion (172.33 ± 2.35%) were measured at 3% FGUS. Therefore, the promising properties of freeze-dried gelatin derived from untreated skin, gave it the opportunity to be successfully used as a techno-functional ingredient in many formulations. Elsevier 2023-08-29 /pmc/articles/PMC10558885/ /pubmed/37809726 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e19620 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Research Article
Salem, Ali
Abdelhedi, Ola
Sebii, Haifa
Ben Taheur, Fadia
Fakhfakh, Nahed
Jridi, Mourad
Zouari, Nacim
Debeaufort, Frederic
Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods
title Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods
title_full Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods
title_fullStr Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods
title_full_unstemmed Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods
title_short Techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: Impact of pretreatments and drying methods
title_sort techno-functional characterization of gelatin extracted from the smooth-hound shark skins: impact of pretreatments and drying methods
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10558885/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37809726
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e19620
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