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    Thermal Denaturation of Pea Globulins (<i>Pisum sativum</i> L.)ī—øMolecular Interactions Leading to Heat-Induced Protein Aggregation

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    The heat-induced denaturation and aggregation of mixed pea globulins (8%, w/w) were investigated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), SDS-PAGE, and size-exclusion chromatography (SEC-HPLC). DSC data showed that the pea proteins denaturation temperature (<i>T</i><sub>d</sub>) was heating-rate dependent. The <i>T</i><sub>d</sub> value decreased by about 4 Ā°C by lowering the heating rate from 10 to 5 Ā°C/min. The SDS-PAGE analysis revealed that protein denaturation upon heating at 90 Ā°C was mainly governed by noncovalent interaction. The SEC-HPLC measurements indicated that low-denatured legumin (ā‰ˆ350ā€“410 kDa) and vicilin/convicilin (ā‰ˆ170 kDa) globulins were heat-denatured and most of their subunits reassociated into high-molecular weight, soluble aggregates (>700 kDa). The addition of <i>N</i>-ethylmaleimide slightly modified the aggregation route of pea globulins. However, partially insoluble macroaggregates were produced in the presence of dithiothreitol, reflecting the stabilizing effect of disulfide bonds within legumin subunits
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