
Projets de Recherche: |
Projet ANR JCJC Elastobio |
Participation(s) à Projets: |
|
Domaines de Recherche: - Sciences du Vivant/Ingénierie des aliments
- Physique/Physique/Chimie-Physique
- Sciences du Vivant/Biochimie, Biologie Moléculaire/Biophysique
- Sciences de l'ingénieur
- Physique/Matière Condensée/Matière Molle
- Chimie/ou physique
- Sciences du Vivant/Alimentation et Nutrition
- Physique/Matière Condensée
- Sciences du Vivant/Sciences agricoles/Agronomie
- Sciences de l'ingénieur/Mécanique
- Sciences de l'ingénieur/Mécanique/Mécanique des fluides
- Physique/Mécanique
- Physique/Matière Condensée/Science des matériaux
- Chimie/Polymères
- Chimie/Matériaux
- Sciences du Vivant/Biologie cellulaire/Interactions cellulaires [q-bio.CB]
- Physique/Matière Condensée/Autre
|
Dernieres productions scientifiques :

|
|
Thermodynamic insights on the liquid-liquid fractionation of gluten proteins in aqueous ethanol 
Auteur(s): Morel Marie-Hélène, Pincemaille J., Lecacheux Laure, Menut Paul, Ramos L., Banc A.
(Article) Publié:
Food Hydrocolloids, vol. 123 p.107142 (2022)
Ref HAL: hal-03337519_v1
DOI: 10.1016/j.foodhyd.2021.107142
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: Wheat gluten includes two major proteins classes, gliadin (25–60 kg/mol) and glutenin polymers (100 to > 2,000 kg/mol) each comprising several polypeptides routinely identified by size-exclusion chromatography and electrophoresis. Gluten proteins are rich in glutamine (30%) and contain several repeated sequences, linking them to the wide class of intrinsically disordered protein (IDP). Here we showed that an ethanol/water (EtOH/W, 50/50, v/v) extract of an industrial gluten, comprising 1/3 of glutenin polymers and 2/3 of gliadin, underwent liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) below 14 °C, leading to two coexisting phases, respectively rich and poor in protein. As the quenching depth increased, proteins of lower and lower molecular weight joined the rich phase, akin to what would have been obtained for a polydisperse polymer sample. Within the rich phase the mass ratio of glutenin over gliadin decreased from 2.5 to 0.5 as the temperature dropped from 14 °C to −0.8 °C. Concomitantly the concentration in glutenin polymers increased up to 143 ± 6 g/L (at 9 °C) and then stopped to evolve, suggesting that the binodal line intersected the gelation line below this temperature. Applying the Flory-Huggins (FH) lattice model for each gluten protein classes, we demonstrated that their partitioning in the coexisting phases followed a same temperature dependency. However, some gliadin species joined the rich phase above their critical temperature. Here, specific interactions with the glutenin polymers through weak forces were exemplified. The study demonstrated the relevance of the Flory-Huggins (FH) lattice model in predicting phase behavior even when applied to complex protein mixtures.
|

|
|
Dense Phases of γ-Gliadins in Confined Geometries 
Auteur(s): Banc A., Navailles Laurence, Leng Jacques, Renard Denis
(Article) Publié:
Colloids And Interfaces, vol. 5 p.51 (2021)
Texte intégral en Openaccess :
Ref HAL: hal-03443023_v1
DOI: 10.3390/colloids5040051
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: The binary phase diagram of γ-gliadin, a wheat storage protein, in water was explored thanks to the microevaporator, an original PDMS microfluidic device. This protein, usually qualified as insoluble in aqueous environments, displayed a partial solubility in water. Two liquid phases, a very dilute and a dense phase, were identified after a few hours of accumulation time in the microevaporator. This liquid–liquid phase separation (LLPS) was further characterized through in situ micro-Raman spectroscopy of the dilute and dense protein phases. Micro-Raman spectroscopy showed a specific orientation of phenylalanine residues perpendicular to the PDMS surfaces only for the diluted phase. This orientation was ascribed to the protein adsorption at interfaces, which would act as nuclei for the growth of dense phase in bulk. This study, thanks to the use of both aqueous solvent and a microevaporator, would provide some evidence for a possible physicochemical origin of the gliadin assembly in the endoplasmic reticulum of albumen cells, leading to the formation of dense phases called protein bodies. The microfluidic tool could be used also in food science to probe protein–protein interactions in order to build up phase diagrams
|

|
|
Sunflower Proteins at Air–Water and Oil–Water Interfaces 
Auteur(s): Poirier A., Stocco A., Kapel Romain, In M., Ramos L., Banc A.
(Article) Publié:
Langmuir, vol. 37 p.2714 - 2727 (2021)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : 
Ref HAL: hal-03189744_v1
DOI: 10.1021/acs.langmuir.0c03441
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: The adsorption of a sunflower protein extract at two air− water and oil−water interfaces is investigated using tensiometry, dilational viscoelasticity, and ellipsometry. For both interfaces, a three step mechanism was evidenced thanks to master curve representations of the data taken at different aging times and protein concentrations. At short times, a diffusion limited adsorption of proteins at interfaces is demonstrated. First, a two-dimensional protein film is formed with a partition of the polypeptide chains in the two phases that depends strongly on the nature of the hydrophobic phase: most of the film is in the aqueous phase at the air−water interface, while it is mostly in the organic phase at the oil−water interface. Then a three-dimensional saturated monolayer of proteins is formed. At short times, adsorption mechanisms are analogous to those found with typical globular proteins, while strong divergences are observed at longer adsorption times. Following the saturation step, a thick layer expands in the aqueous phase and appears associated with the release of large objects in the bulk. The kinetic evolution of this second layer is compatible with a diffusion limited adsorption of the minor population of polymeric complexes with hydrodynamic radius R H ∼ 80 nm, evidenced in equilibrium with hexameric globulins (R H ∼ 6 nm) in solution. These complexes could result from the presence of residual polyphenols in the extract and raise the question of the role of these compounds in the interfacial properties of plant protein extracts.
|

|
|
Impact of the protein composition on the structure and viscoelasticity of polymer-like gluten gels 
Auteur(s): Ramos L. , Banc A., Louhichi A., Pincemaille J., Jestin Jacques, Fu Zhendong, Appavou Marie-Sousai, Menut Paul, Morel Marie-Hélène
(Article) Publié:
Journal Of Physics: Condensed Matter, vol. 33 p.144001 (2021)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : 
Ref HAL: hal-03139486_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2101.07322
DOI: 10.1088/1361-648X/abdf91
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: We investigate the structure of gluten polymer-like gels in a binary mixture of water/ethanol, $50/50$ v/v, a good solvent for gluten proteins. Gluten comprises two main families of proteins, monomeric gliadins and polymer glutenins. In the semi-dilute regime, scattering experiments highlight two classes of behavior, akin to standard polymer solution and polymer gel, depending on the protein composition. We demonstrate that these two classes are encoded in the structural features of the proteins in very dilute solution, and are correlated with the presence of proteins assemblies of typical size tens of nanometers. The assemblies only exist when the protein mixture is sufficiently enriched in glutenins. They are found directly associated to the presence in the gel of domains enriched in non-exchangeable H-bonds and of size comparable to that of the protein assemblies. The domains are probed in neutron scattering experiments thanks to their unique contrast. We show that the sample visco-elasticity is also directly correlated to the quantity of domains enriched in H-bonds, showing the key role of H-bonds in ruling the visco-elasticity of polymer gluten gels.
|

|
|
Tailoring the viscoelasticity of polymer gels of gluten proteins through solvent quality 
Auteur(s): Costanzo S., Banc A., Louhichi A., Chauveau E., Wu Baohu, Morel Marie-Hélène, Ramos L.
(Article) Publié:
Macromolecules, vol. 53 p.9470-9479 (2020)
Texte intégral en Openaccess : 
Ref HAL: hal-03003151_v1
Ref Arxiv: 2010.10317
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.0c01466
Ref. & Cit.: NASA ADS
Exporter : BibTex | endNote
Résumé: We investigate the linear viscoelasticity of polymer gels produced by the dispersion of gluten proteins in water:ethanol binary mixtures with various ethanol contents, from pure water to 60% v/v ethanol. We show that the complex viscoelasticity of the gels exhibits a time/solvent composition superposition principle, demonstrating the self-similarity of the gels produced in different binary solvents. All gels can be regarded as near critical gels with characteristic rheological parameters, elastic plateau and characteristic relaxation time, which are related one to another, as a consequence of self-similarity, and span several orders of magnitude when changing the solvent composition. Thanks to calorimetry and neutron scattering experiments, we evidencea co-solvency effect with a better solvation of the complex polymer-like chains of the gluten proteins as the amount of ethanol increases. Overall the gel viscoelasticity can be accounted for by a unique characteristic length characterizing the crosslink density of the supramolecular network, which is solvent composition-dependent. On a molecular level, these findings could be interpreted as a transition of the supramolecular interactions, mainly H-bonds, from intra- to interchains, which would be facilitated by the disruption of hydrophobic interactions by ethanol molecules. This work provides new insight for tailoring the gelation process of complex polymer gels.
|
Plus...