Molecular associations in acacia gums

Al-Assaf, S, Sakata, M, McKenna, C, Aoki, H and Phillips, G O (2009) Molecular associations in acacia gums.

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Abstract

The tendency of polysaccharides to associate in aqueous solution has long been recognised. Molecular associations can profoundly affect their performance in a given application due to its influence on the molecular weight, shape and size. This will ultimately determine how the molecules will interact with each other, with other molecules and with water. There are several factors, such as hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic association, ion mediated association, electrostatic interaction, concentration dependence and the presence of proteinaceous components, which affect this behaviour. Our objective is to highlight the role of the proteinaceous component, present in acacia gum, to promote associations when the gum is subjected to various processing treatments such as maturation, spray drying and irradiation. The results demonstrate the ability of the proteinaceous component to promote hydrophobic associations which influence the size and proportion of the arabinogalactan high molecular weight component (AGP). Heat treatment in solid state (maturation) increases the hydrophobic character of the gum and hence its emulsification performance. Spray drying also involves aggregation through hydrophobic association but changes the surface properties of peptide moieties to become more hydrophilic compared to the association promoted by the maturation treatment in the solid state. Irradiation induced cross-linking, in the presence of unsaturated gas, was used to introduce C-C bonds into the carbohydrate moiety and thus confirms the hydrophobic association prompted by the heat used in the maturation and spray drying. This association can be reversed by treatments such as filtration or high pressure homogenisation. The results reported here reconcile the contradiction about structure of gum arabic proposed by the wattle blossom and twisted hairy rope models and shows that the AGP fraction is basically an aggregated fraction made up of AG units stabilised by low molecular weight highly proteinaceous components. .

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: © Springer 2009This is an electronic version of an article that was originally published in Structural Chemistry, published by Springer Netherlands in 2009.The origional publication is available at http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11224-009-9430-3
Keywords: Gum arabic, spray drying, radiation cross-linking, filtration, homogenisation
Divisions: ?? GlyndwrUniversity ??
Depositing User: ULCC Admin
Date Deposited: 05 Oct 2011 09:14
Last Modified: 11 Dec 2017 20:06
URI: https://glyndwr.repository.guildhe.ac.uk/id/eprint/235

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