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Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight

This study explores the molecular structuring of salmon gelatin (SG) with controlled molecular weight produced from salmon skin, and its relationship with its thermal and rheological properties. SG was produced under different pH conditions to produce samples with well-defined high (SGH), medium (SG...

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Autores principales: Enrione, Javier, Char, Cielo, Pepczynska, Marzena, Padilla, Cristina, González-Muñoz, Adrian, Olguín, Yusser, Quinzio, Claudia, Iturriaga, Laura, Díaz-Calderón, Paulo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7407307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32709001
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12071587
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author Enrione, Javier
Char, Cielo
Pepczynska, Marzena
Padilla, Cristina
González-Muñoz, Adrian
Olguín, Yusser
Quinzio, Claudia
Iturriaga, Laura
Díaz-Calderón, Paulo
author_facet Enrione, Javier
Char, Cielo
Pepczynska, Marzena
Padilla, Cristina
González-Muñoz, Adrian
Olguín, Yusser
Quinzio, Claudia
Iturriaga, Laura
Díaz-Calderón, Paulo
author_sort Enrione, Javier
collection PubMed
description This study explores the molecular structuring of salmon gelatin (SG) with controlled molecular weight produced from salmon skin, and its relationship with its thermal and rheological properties. SG was produced under different pH conditions to produce samples with well-defined high (SGH), medium (SGM), and low (SGL) molecular weight. These samples were characterized in terms of their molecular weight (MW, capillary viscometry), molecular weight distribution (electrophoresis), amino acid profile, and Raman spectroscopy. These results were correlated with thermal (gelation energy) and rheological properties. SGH presented the higher MW (173 kDa) whereas SGL showed shorter gelatin polymer chains (MW < 65 kDa). Raman spectra and gelation energy suggest that amount of helical structures in gelatin is dependent on the molecular weight, which was well reflected by the higher viscosity and G′ values for SGH. Interestingly, for all the molecular weight and molecular configuration tested, SG behaved as a strong gel (tan δ < 1), despite its low viscosity and low gelation temperature (3–10 °C). Hence, the molecular structuring of SG reflected directly on the thermal and viscosity properties, but not in terms of the viscoelastic strength of gelatin produced. These results give new insights about the relationship among structural features and macromolecular properties (thermal and rheological), which is relevant to design a low viscosity biomaterial with tailored properties for specific applications.
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spelling pubmed-74073072020-08-11 Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight Enrione, Javier Char, Cielo Pepczynska, Marzena Padilla, Cristina González-Muñoz, Adrian Olguín, Yusser Quinzio, Claudia Iturriaga, Laura Díaz-Calderón, Paulo Polymers (Basel) Article This study explores the molecular structuring of salmon gelatin (SG) with controlled molecular weight produced from salmon skin, and its relationship with its thermal and rheological properties. SG was produced under different pH conditions to produce samples with well-defined high (SGH), medium (SGM), and low (SGL) molecular weight. These samples were characterized in terms of their molecular weight (MW, capillary viscometry), molecular weight distribution (electrophoresis), amino acid profile, and Raman spectroscopy. These results were correlated with thermal (gelation energy) and rheological properties. SGH presented the higher MW (173 kDa) whereas SGL showed shorter gelatin polymer chains (MW < 65 kDa). Raman spectra and gelation energy suggest that amount of helical structures in gelatin is dependent on the molecular weight, which was well reflected by the higher viscosity and G′ values for SGH. Interestingly, for all the molecular weight and molecular configuration tested, SG behaved as a strong gel (tan δ < 1), despite its low viscosity and low gelation temperature (3–10 °C). Hence, the molecular structuring of SG reflected directly on the thermal and viscosity properties, but not in terms of the viscoelastic strength of gelatin produced. These results give new insights about the relationship among structural features and macromolecular properties (thermal and rheological), which is relevant to design a low viscosity biomaterial with tailored properties for specific applications. MDPI 2020-07-17 /pmc/articles/PMC7407307/ /pubmed/32709001 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12071587 Text en © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Enrione, Javier
Char, Cielo
Pepczynska, Marzena
Padilla, Cristina
González-Muñoz, Adrian
Olguín, Yusser
Quinzio, Claudia
Iturriaga, Laura
Díaz-Calderón, Paulo
Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight
title Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight
title_full Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight
title_fullStr Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight
title_full_unstemmed Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight
title_short Rheological and Structural Study of Salmon Gelatin with Controlled Molecular Weight
title_sort rheological and structural study of salmon gelatin with controlled molecular weight
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7407307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32709001
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/polym12071587
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