In this study, proteolysis resulting from the action of the indigenous milk proteinase, plasmin, in high pressure (HP)-treated raw skim bovine milk during storage was examined. Plasmin activity was reduced by treatment at pressures ≥400 MPa and decreased further throughout 28 d of storage at 5°C. In untreated milk or milk treated at 100 MPa plasmin activity increased during the first 3 d of storage at 37°C, indicating activation of plasminogen; considerably less activation occurred in milk treated at 200-600 MPa. However, considerable decreases in plasmin activity, probably due to autolysis, were apparent in all samples on storage at 37°C for >3 d. Proteolysis, as measured by increases in the level of pH 4.6-soluble N and decreases in the level of β-casein, was very limited on storage of milk at 5°C, with little difference between untreated and HP-treated samples. Proteolysis on storage of milk at 37°C was influenced only slightly by treatment of milk at a pressure ≤250 MPa and was reduced considerably in milk treated at 600 MPa for 30 min, but in milk treated at 300-400 MPa, proteolysis was more extensive than in untreated milk, possibly as a result of HP-induced disruption of casein micelles. Overall, HP can either induce or reduce proteolysis in milk, and may therefore have implications for products made from such milk.
CITATION STYLE
Huppertz, T., Fox, P. F., & Kelly, A. L. (2004). Plasmin activity and proteolysis in high pressure-treated bovine milk. Lait, 84(3), 297–304. https://doi.org/10.1051/lait:2004003
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