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Effect of ultrasonic assisted grafting on the structural and functional properties of mung bean protein isolate conjugated with maltodextrin through maillard reaction.

Four different methods of maillard reaction including ultrasound (150 W, 10 min) assisted, classical wet heating (80 °C, 60min), moderate water bath heating (60°C, 12 to 30 h) and dry state method (60 °C, 79 % relative humidity and 48 h) were used to Mung bean protein isolate - Maltodexrtin conjugates (MPI-MD) preparation. The samples prepared under ultrasound and wet heating were chosen for further analysis according to degree of graft and UV-absorbance at 420 nm. Higher glycosylation at short time and lower browning were obtained under ultrasound treatment. Covalent attachment in conjugates confirmed by SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The structural analysis revealed prominent unfolding effect of ultrasound waves on the protein's molecules. The decrease of α-helix content was related to the exposure of buried amino group residues during reaction. Glycation of MPI under ultrasound caused changes in tertiary structure of protein and leads to decrease in the fluorescence intensity compared with native and wet heating treatments. FTIR spectra confirmed the conjugation of the MPI and MD and suggested that protein structure was changed and ultrasound promoted the graft reaction more than wet heating treatment. Conjugated MPI showed higher emulsification and solubility index than MPI, moreover the effect of ultrasonic waves on ameliorated functional properties was impressive than those for wet heating treatment. Overall, this study showed use of ultrasonication in maillard reaction was a suitable method for producing MPI- MD conjugates and improved the efficiency of graft reaction and functional properties of grafts.

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