Conformational Modifications of α Gliadin and Globulin Proteins upon Complex Coacervates Formation with Gum Arabic as Studied by Raman Microspectroscopy
Igor Chourpa, V. Ducel, J. Richard, Pierre Dubois, Frank Boury
Biomacromolecules
Abstract
As a molecular model of gelatin-free coacervates, complexes of pea globulin and alpha gliadin proteins with gum arabic prepared at different acidic pH values are studied using Raman microspectrometry. Raman spectra confirm higher content of beta-sheets and random coils in pea globulin and dominating alpha-helical structures in alpha gliadin. For protein-gum arabic complexes, Raman data support the existence of specific pH conditions for optimal complex coacervation (pH 2.75 for globulin and pH 3.0 for gliadin(1)), when (i) pH-induced conformational perturbations of free protein structure are the strongest and (ii) compensation of these perturbations by gum arabic is the most pronounced. Conformations implied in the protein-gum complexes are mainly beta-sheets in pea globulin and alpha-helix in alpha gliadin. The role of electrostatic and non-Coulombic interactions (intermolecular hydrogen bonds) in stabilizing of protein-polysaccharide complexes is discussed in relation with the overall structure and the charge density profile of these two proteins.
Extracted Claims
4 claims extracted from this paper into the knowledge graph
protein-gum arabic complexes affects conformational modifications
“For protein-gum arabic complexes, Raman data support the existence of specific pH conditions for optimal complex coacervation (pH 2.75 for globulin and pH 3.0 for gliadin(1)), when (i) pH-induced conf...”
pea globulin has higher content of beta-sheets and random coils
“Raman spectra confirm higher content of beta-sheets and random coils in pea globulin and dominating alpha-helical structures in alpha gliadin”
alpha gliadin has dominating alpha-helical structures
“Raman spectra confirm higher content of beta-sheets and random coils in pea globulin and dominating alpha-helical structures in alpha gliadin”