• Title/Summary/Keyword: crude caseinomacropeptide (CMP)

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Effect of Trichloroacetic Acid on the Solubility of Caseinomacropeptide

  • Shin, Sung-Chul;Jang, Hae-Dong
    • Preventive Nutrition and Food Science
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    • v.7 no.1
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    • pp.43-47
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    • 2002
  • Crude caseinomacropeptide (CMP) was prepared from Na-caseinate using a commercial renneting enzyme. Most of the crude CMP was released from the Na-caseinate by hydrolyzing with the enzyme for 40 min. The hydrolysis of the k-casein with carbohydrate was slower than that of the k-casein without carbohydrate, as shown by the analyses of the sialic acid content and the tricine-SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. The yield of crude CMP from Na-caseinate was 3.7%. Cation exchange chromatography showed that the crude CMP consisted of 40.5% CMP and 59.5% caseinogylcomacropetide (CGP). The effect of the TCA concentration on the solubility of CMP and CGP was determined by using crude CMP. The amounts of crude CMP and sialic acid decreased in the proportion to the increase of trichloroacetic acid (TCA) concentration from 2 to 12%, suggesting that the CGP containing carbohydrate, as well as the CMP having no carbohydrate, was precipitated in a range of 4 to 12%, depending on the TCA concentration. This result supports the hypothesis that the different non-glycosylated and glycosylated forms of CMP have different sensitivities to TCA precipitation.