2010
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodres.2009.07.021
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Comparison of the functional properties of pea, chickpea and lentil protein concentrates processed using ultrafiltration and isoelectric precipitation techniques

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Cited by 647 publications
(541 citation statements)
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“…The SPI, SPE and EWP which showed LGC of 10 g/100 g had better gelling capacity than LPEs, but WPI had comparable LGC with those of four LPEs. In the literature, very high LGCs between 11.5 and 18 g/100 mL (10.3e15.3 g/100 g) were reported for chickpea proteins obtained by the IEP method Kaur & Singh, 2007;Papalamprou, Doxastakis, Biliaderis, & Kiosseoglou, 2009), but LGC of 12 g/100 mL (10.7 g/ 100 g) reported by Boye et al (2010) for two lentil cultivars was only slightly lower than those obtained in this study for LPE-1 and LPE-3. These results clearly indicated the outstanding gelling capacity of proteins in CPE.…”
Section: Gel Forming Capacitiescontrasting
confidence: 77%
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“…The SPI, SPE and EWP which showed LGC of 10 g/100 g had better gelling capacity than LPEs, but WPI had comparable LGC with those of four LPEs. In the literature, very high LGCs between 11.5 and 18 g/100 mL (10.3e15.3 g/100 g) were reported for chickpea proteins obtained by the IEP method Kaur & Singh, 2007;Papalamprou, Doxastakis, Biliaderis, & Kiosseoglou, 2009), but LGC of 12 g/100 mL (10.7 g/ 100 g) reported by Boye et al (2010) for two lentil cultivars was only slightly lower than those obtained in this study for LPE-1 and LPE-3. These results clearly indicated the outstanding gelling capacity of proteins in CPE.…”
Section: Gel Forming Capacitiescontrasting
confidence: 77%
“…Therefore, considering their total protein contents, the LPEs and CPEs obtained by the IEP procedure could be named as protein isolate and concentrate, respectively. The previous findings of Boye et al (2010) also showed the higher protein contents of IEP purified (at pH 4.5) lentil proteins than the chickpea proteins. The protein contents determined by these authors for IEP purified protein extracts of green lentils (0.79 g/g), red lentils (0.78 g/g) and Kabuli chickpeas (0.64 g/g) were lower than those determined for Turkish lentil and chickpea cultivars in this study.…”
Section: Protein Solubilities and Contentssupporting
confidence: 52%
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“…The solubility profiles of soy protein has been reported in several studies (Ruíz-Henestrosa et al 2008;Bae et al 2012). As the pH changed, the hydrophobic amino acids were exposed at the isoelectric point which allowed the protein particles to dissociate from water (Boye et al 2010). Solubility of both SPI and SPH improved at alkaline pH with the highest solubility (98.3 %) for SPH at pH 7.…”
Section: Protein Solubilitymentioning
confidence: 92%