Biomolecules (Apr 2023)

Physico-Chemical Changes Induced by Gamma Irradiation on Some Structural Protein Extracts

  • Maria Stanca,
  • Carmen Gaidau,
  • Traian Zaharescu,
  • George-Alin Balan,
  • Iulia Matei,
  • Aurica Precupas,
  • Anca Ruxandra Leonties,
  • Gabriela Ionita

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biom13050774
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 5
p. 774

Abstract

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In this study, the effect of gamma irradiation (10 kGy) on proteins extracted from animal hide, scales, and wool was evidenced by calorimetric (μDSC) and spectroscopic (IR, circular dichroism, and EPR) methods. Keratin was obtained from sheep wool, collagen and bovine gelatin from bovine hide, and fish gelatin from fish scales. The μDSC experiments evidenced that gamma irradiation influences the thermal stability of these proteins differently. The thermal stability of keratin decreases, while a resistance to thermal denaturation was noticed for collagen and gelatins after gamma irradiation. The analysis of the IR spectra demonstrated that gamma irradiation determines changes in the vibrational modes of the amide groups that are associated with protein denaturation, most meaningfully in the case of keratin. As evidenced by circular dichroism for all proteins considered, exposure to gamma radiation produces changes in the secondary structure that are more significant than those produced by UV irradiation. Riboflavin has different effects on the secondary structure of the investigated proteins, a stabilizing effect for keratin and fish gelatin and a destabilizing effect for bovine gelatin, observed in both irradiated and non-irradiated samples. The EPR spectroscopy evidences the presence, in the gamma-irradiated samples, of free radicals centered on oxygen, and the increase in their EPR signals over time due to the presence of riboflavin.

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