Roles of grape thaumatin-like protein and chitinase in white wine haze formation |
| |
Authors: | Marangon Matteo Van Sluyter Steven C Neilson Karlie A Chan Cherrine Haynes Paul A Waters Elizabeth J Falconer Robert J |
| |
Affiliation: | The Australian Wine Research Institute, PO Box 197, Glen Osmond, SA 5064, Australia. |
| |
Abstract: | Grape chitinase was found to be the primary cause of heat-induced haze formation in white wines. Chitinase was the dominant protein in a haze induced by treating Sauvignon blanc wine at 30 °C for 22 h. In artificial wines and real wines, chitinase concentration was directly correlated to the turbidity of heat-induced haze formation (50 °C for 3 h). Sulfate was confirmed to have a role in haze formation, likely by converting soluble aggregates into larger visible haze particles. Thaumatin-like protein was detected in the insoluble fraction by SDS-PAGE analysis but had no measurable impact on turbidity. Differential scanning calorimetry demonstrated that the complex mixture of molecules in wine plays a role in thermal instability of wine proteins and contributes additional complexity to the wine haze phenomenon. |
| |
Keywords: | |
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|