Publications by authors named "H A Kosters"

Two peptides, [f135-158] and [f135-162]-SH, were used to study the binding of the peptides to native β-lactolobulin, as well as the subsequent effects on aggregation and gelation of β-lactoglobulin. The binding of the peptide [f135-158] to β-lactoglobulin at room temperature was confirmed by SELDI-TOF-MS. It was further illustrated by increased turbidity of mixed solutions of peptide and protein (at pH 7), indicating association of proteins and peptides in larger complexes.

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A bovine β-lactoglobulin hydrolysate, obtained by the hydrolysis by the Glu specific enzyme Bacillus licheniformis protease (BLP), was fractionated at pH 7.0 into a soluble and an insoluble fraction and characterized by LC-MS. From the 26 peptides identified in the soluble fraction, five peptides (A[f97-112] = [f115-128], AB[f1-45], AB[f135-157], AB[f135-158], and AB[f138-162]) bound to β-lactoglobulin at room temperature.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how the charge density of carboxylated pullulan, a non-charged polysaccharide, affects its interaction with proteins at the air/water interface.
  • Higher charge density in pullulan slows down the rate of increase in surface pressure and reduces the compactness of protein layers due to electrostatic repulsion.
  • Results indicate that polysaccharide charge density is a key factor influencing both the speed of adsorption and the behavior of the mixed protein-polysaccharide layers, which has implications for their practical applications.
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To study the influence of the carbohydrate-moiety of ovalbumin on the formation of the heat-stable conformer S-ovalbumin, ovalbumin is deglycosylated with PNGase-F under native conditions. Although the enzymatic deglycosylation procedure resulted in a complete loss of the ability to bind to Concavalin A column-material, only in about 50% the proteins lost their complete carbohydrate moiety, as demonstrated by mass spectrometry and size exclusion chromatography. Thermal stability and conformational changes were determined using circular dichroism and differential scanning calorimetry and demonstrated at ambient temperature no conformational changes due to the deglycosylation.

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The stability of adsorbed protein layers against deformation has in literature been attributed to the formation of a continuous gel-like network. This hypothesis is mostly based on measurements of the increase of the surface shear elasticity with time. For several proteins this increase has been attributed to the formation of intermolecular disulfide bridges between adsorbed proteins.

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