نتایج جستجو برای: whey proteins

تعداد نتایج: 559501  

2011
Andrés Illanes

Whey is a co-product of processes for the production of cheese and casein that retains most of the lactose content in milk. World production of whey is estimated around 200 million tons per year with an increase rate of about 2%/per year. Milk production is seasonal, so surplus whey is unavoidable. Traditionally, whey producers have considered it as a nuisance and strategies of whey handling ha...

Journal: :Journal of proteome research 2010
Eveline M Ibeagha-Awemu Aloysius E Ibeagha Serge Messier Xin Zhao

Gram-negative and -positive bacteria elicit different response patterns by the host. The proteomic profiles of milk whey samples from cows naturally infected with Escherichia coli or Staphyloccocus aureus as compared to whey from healthy cows were determined by one-dimensional, liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), bioinformatics processing, and pathway analyses. Since mamm...

Journal: :The American journal of clinical nutrition 2004
Mikael Nilsson Marianne Stenberg Anders H Frid Jens J Holst Inger M E Björck

BACKGROUND Milk products deviate from other carbohydrate-containing foods in that they produce high insulin responses, despite their low GI. The insulinotropic mechanism of milk has not been elucidated. OBJECTIVE The objective was to evaluate the effect of common dietary sources of animal or vegetable proteins on concentrations of postprandial blood glucose, insulin, amino acids, and incretin...

Journal: :The American journal of clinical nutrition 2007
Anssi H Manninen

A recent study by Lacroix et al (1) compared the postprandial utilization of nitrogen from 3 different proteins, namely micellar casein (“slow protein”), milk soluble protein isolate (“fast protein”), and total milk protein (another “slow protein”). Their data suggest that slow protein induces better postprandial nitrogen utilization than does fast protein. According to Lacroix et al, “This res...

2017
Julie E. Dalziel Wayne Young Catherine M. McKenzie Neill W. Haggarty Nicole C. Roy

Little is known about how milk proteins affect gastrointestinal (GI) transit, particularly for the elderly, in whom digestion has been observed to be slowed. We tested the hypothesis that GI transit is faster for whey than for casein and that this effect is accentuated with hydrolysates, similar to soy. Adult male rats (18 months old) were fed native whey or casein, hydrolyzed whey (WPH) or cas...

Journal: :Proceedings of the Voronezh State University of Engineering Technologies 2021

Journal: :Food Processing: Techniques and Technology 2020

2015
Juliana C. Bassan Antonio J. Goulart Ana L. M. Nasser Thaís M. S. Bezerra Saulo S. Garrido Cynthia B. Rustiguel Luis H. S. Guimarães Rubens Monti Sabato D'Auria

Milk whey proteins are well known for their high biological value and versatile functional properties, characteristics that allow its wide use in the food and pharmaceutical industries. In this work, a 24 kDa protein from buffalo cheese whey was analyzed by mass spectrometry and presented homology with Bos taurus beta-lactoglobulin. In addition, the proteins present in buffalo cheese whey were ...

Journal: :Journal of dairy science 2003
C I Onwulata R P Konstance P H Cooke H M Farrell

Whey, a byproduct of the cheesemaking process, is concentrated by processors to make whey protein concentrates (WPC) and isolates (WPI). Only 50% of whey proteins are used in foods. In order to increase their usage, texturizing WPC, WPI, and whey albumin is proposed to create ingredients with new functionality. Extrusion processing texturizes globular proteins by shearing and stretching them in...

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