A process to reduce cholesterol in liquid egg yolk using P-cyclodextrin (CD) was optimized by response surface methodology, based on cholesterol reduction and yield. The most important factors influencing cholesterol reduction were dilution of egg yolk to a defined water:solid ratio and CD concentration. In the final process, egg yolk was adjusted to pH 10.5, diluted to a water:solid ratio of 2.9, heated to 5O"C, and CD added at a CD:cholesterol molar ratio of 4.0. The slurry was mixed for 6.5 min at 1800 rpm, cooled to 4°C and centrifuged. Cholesterol in the supematant was reduced by 89.2%. The yield, cholesterol and CD in the final product were adjusted by varying centrifugal force and CD concentration. brecht (1994), was marketed briefly in the U.S. This product was prepared by diluting egg yolk with a salt solution to dissociate and solubilize the granular fraction, followed by addition of CD. Insoluble CD-cholesterol complexes were removed by centrifugation and excess salt was removed by electrodialysis. That was a costly process, thus it might be economically advantageous to dissociate egg yolk granules by a different approach. Causeret et al. (1991) reported that egg yolk granules were dissociated at high and low pH. Our objective was to develop and optimize an efficient and simple process using CD to extract cholesterol from liquid egg yolk after dissociation of the granules by pH adjustment.
The composition and functional properties of cholesterol reduced egg yolk (CREY) were compared to those of control egg yolk (EY). The CREY was prepared by absorbing cholesterol with beta-cyclodextrin after dilution and dissociation of granules at pH 10.5. The CREY contained less lipid and protein and more carbohydrate and ash than EY. Egg lipids were fractionated into triglycerides, cholesterol esters, free cholesterol, phosphatidyl choline, and phosphatidyl ethanolamine. Free and esterified cholesterol in CREY were reduced by 91.6 and 94.4%, respectively. Triglycerides were the major lipid class in CREY. The CREY contained more oleic acid and less linoleic acid than the control. Protein solubility in 0.1 and 0.6 M NaCl and sponge cake volume did not differ. The composition of proteins soluble in 0.6 M NaCl in both egg preparations were similar as determined by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The electrophoretic profiles of proteins soluble in 0.1 M NaCl were similar, except that lipovitellin form EY was insoluble under these conditions. The CREY was less yellow than EY, as indicated by beta-carotene concentrations and Hunter b values. These results suggest that beta-cyclodextrin can be used to produce a low cholesterol egg product with compositional and functional properties similar to EY.
Direct desaturation of free myristic acid by hen liver microsomal Delta(9)-desaturase without prior activation to myristoyl-CoA by the addition of adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and CoA was observed when the incubation medium was mixed at mixing speeds of >250 rpm in the presence of fatty acid-binding proteins (FABP). Desaturation was linear with time and proportional to the microsomal protein concentration. Desaturation was maximal at pH 7.9. The greatest desaturation rate was observed at a mixing speed of 500 rpm in the presence of FABP. Desaturation decreased at mixing speeds of >500 rpm. Data suggest that when myristic acid is bound to FABP in the form of protein-monomer complexes, its activation to the CoA derivative is not necessary for it to be desaturated by the Delta(9)-desaturase when using mixing rates of >250 rpm. Myristic acid-FABP complexes serve as substrates for the Delta(9)-desaturase at mixing rates of >250 rpm. Desaturation was reduced by bovine serum albumin and alpha-bromohexadecanoate, and no desaturation was observed in the absence of FABP. These findings suggest that FABP may regulate the accessibility of fatty acids in the desaturation reaction to the active site of the desaturase rather than just protect the membrane-bound desaturase from the cytotoxic effect of free fatty acids.
The desaturation of myristoyl-CoA to myristoleoyl-CoA was measured in microsomal preparations of hen liver. The desaturation was maximal at pH 7.4. The enzymatic activity was linear with time up to 10 min and proportional to microsomal protein concentrations. The initial velocity was linear with substrate concentrations between 13 and up to 200 microM. A decrease in desaturation activity was observed at substrate concentrations greater than 266 microM. There was an absolute requirement for reduced pyridine nucleotide (NADH), while a maximum activity was observed at a myristoyl-CoA:NADH mole ratio of 1. Competitive inhibition studies of myristoyl-CoA desaturation suggest that the inhibitors, stearyl and oleyl-CoA, were more effective than palmitoyl-CoA. Free CoA did not inhibit the delta(9)-desaturase system. The desaturation of myristoyl-CoA was stimulated by bovine serum albumin and reduced by cytoplasmic proteins. The effect of cytoplasmic proteins on the enzymatic reaction was completely abolished by trypsin digestion and boiling for 30 min. On the basis of these data, it was concluded that 9,10-desaturation of acyl-CoA derivatives containing 14-18 carbon fatty acyl chains is catalyzed by the same enzyme.
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