Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'

Sea cucumbers are exclusively marine animals which form a conspicuous part of the benthic fauna in Malaysia. They are regarded for nutritional and medicinal value of the processed form of their body wall known as Ibeche-de-mer'. Although processing is done by a variety of methods, the techniqu...

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Main Author: Poedijono Nitisewojo
Format: Research Report
Language:English
Published: Universiti Malaysia Sabah 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23155/1/Control%20of%20protein%20denaturation%20for%20enhancing%20keeping.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23155/
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spelling my.ums.eprints.231552019-07-29T08:22:24Z https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23155/ Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer' Poedijono Nitisewojo SH Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling Sea cucumbers are exclusively marine animals which form a conspicuous part of the benthic fauna in Malaysia. They are regarded for nutritional and medicinal value of the processed form of their body wall known as Ibeche-de-mer'. Although processing is done by a variety of methods, the technique essentially involves longitudinally incising the body to remove water, gutting, boiling and drying. The product is also smoked or pickled in certain regions. There is no application of new technology to post-harvest processing of sea cucumbers. This project was undertaken to examine the effect of different crypreservation conditions on qualitative nature of protein in beche-de-mer and to determine the treatment which could improve the shelf-life and keeping quality of the product from the common sandfish. Holothuria scabra. Body wall of the sandfish was treated at 4° C, 0° C and - 10° C for durations of 12, 24, 48 and 72 hours. At the end of each treatment period the samples were homogenized in chilled 5% neutral (pH=?) salt solution (NaCI) and centrifuged. Protein was measured in the supernatant. Alteration in this saltsoluble fraction of protein was used as an index of denaturation. Protein denaturation in beche-de-mer increased steadily with the duration of storage. Denaturation rate depended on the storage temperature. Lower temperature slowed the denaturation. Thus, in a 12- hour storage at -10°C the protein extractability was 980/0 - a decline of mere 20/0. The decline was more abrupt initially, and with a sustained superchilling, the rate reduced drastically. Denaturation of protein as observed in beche-de-mer was the result of changes in polypeptide chain structure. During denaturation, peptide bonds are known to be unaffected but polypeptide chains uncoil and develop cross-linkages with adjacent molecular chains destroying the higher order structure of the molecule. Temperature above aOc denatures the protein faster by acting on non-covalent bonds which are considered important in stabilizing the secondary and tertiary structure. It appears from the results of . this study that the molecular mechanisms associated with the folding of polypeptide chains and cross-linking among them are complex processes and their response to temperature gradients different. There might be a temporal pattern in polypeptides in developing a chemically stable form at a particular storage temperature. The data leaves no doubt that initial superchilling can protect the native structure of protein and contribute a great deal to improving its keeping quality and shelf-life. Universiti Malaysia Sabah 2001 Research Report NonPeerReviewed text en https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23155/1/Control%20of%20protein%20denaturation%20for%20enhancing%20keeping.pdf Poedijono Nitisewojo (2001) Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'. (Unpublished)
institution Universiti Malaysia Sabah
building UMS Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Malaysia Sabah
content_source UMS Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.ums.edu.my/
language English
topic SH Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling
spellingShingle SH Aquaculture. Fisheries. Angling
Poedijono Nitisewojo
Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'
description Sea cucumbers are exclusively marine animals which form a conspicuous part of the benthic fauna in Malaysia. They are regarded for nutritional and medicinal value of the processed form of their body wall known as Ibeche-de-mer'. Although processing is done by a variety of methods, the technique essentially involves longitudinally incising the body to remove water, gutting, boiling and drying. The product is also smoked or pickled in certain regions. There is no application of new technology to post-harvest processing of sea cucumbers. This project was undertaken to examine the effect of different crypreservation conditions on qualitative nature of protein in beche-de-mer and to determine the treatment which could improve the shelf-life and keeping quality of the product from the common sandfish. Holothuria scabra. Body wall of the sandfish was treated at 4° C, 0° C and - 10° C for durations of 12, 24, 48 and 72 hours. At the end of each treatment period the samples were homogenized in chilled 5% neutral (pH=?) salt solution (NaCI) and centrifuged. Protein was measured in the supernatant. Alteration in this saltsoluble fraction of protein was used as an index of denaturation. Protein denaturation in beche-de-mer increased steadily with the duration of storage. Denaturation rate depended on the storage temperature. Lower temperature slowed the denaturation. Thus, in a 12- hour storage at -10°C the protein extractability was 980/0 - a decline of mere 20/0. The decline was more abrupt initially, and with a sustained superchilling, the rate reduced drastically. Denaturation of protein as observed in beche-de-mer was the result of changes in polypeptide chain structure. During denaturation, peptide bonds are known to be unaffected but polypeptide chains uncoil and develop cross-linkages with adjacent molecular chains destroying the higher order structure of the molecule. Temperature above aOc denatures the protein faster by acting on non-covalent bonds which are considered important in stabilizing the secondary and tertiary structure. It appears from the results of . this study that the molecular mechanisms associated with the folding of polypeptide chains and cross-linking among them are complex processes and their response to temperature gradients different. There might be a temporal pattern in polypeptides in developing a chemically stable form at a particular storage temperature. The data leaves no doubt that initial superchilling can protect the native structure of protein and contribute a great deal to improving its keeping quality and shelf-life.
format Research Report
author Poedijono Nitisewojo
author_facet Poedijono Nitisewojo
author_sort Poedijono Nitisewojo
title Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'
title_short Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'
title_full Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'
title_fullStr Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'
title_full_unstemmed Control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'
title_sort control of protein denaturation for enhancing keeping quality and shelf-life of 'beche-de-mer'
publisher Universiti Malaysia Sabah
publishDate 2001
url https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23155/1/Control%20of%20protein%20denaturation%20for%20enhancing%20keeping.pdf
https://eprints.ums.edu.my/id/eprint/23155/
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score 13.211869