Size distribution of pressure-decomposed casein micelles studied by dynamic light scattering and AFM

Reversible and irreversible states of pressure-dissociated casein micelles were studied by in situ light scattering techniques and ex situ atomic force microscopy. AFM experiments performed at ambient pressure reveal heterogeneities across the micelle, suggesting a sub-structure on a 20 nm scale. At pressures between 50 and 250 MPa, the native micelles disintegrate into small fragments on the scale of the observed sub-structure. At pressures above 300 MPa the micelles fully decompose into their monomeric constituents. After pressure release two discrete populations of casein aggregates are observed, depending on the applied initial pressure: Between 160 and 240 MPa stable micelles with diameters near 100 nm without detectable sub-structures are formed. Casein micelles exposed to pressures above 280 MPa re-associate at ambient pressure yielding mini-micelles with diameters near 25 nm. The implications concerning structural models are discussed.

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