Journal of Dairy Science (Dec 2024)

Effects of protein on green tea quality in a milk-tea model during heat treatment: Antioxidant activity, foaming properties, and unbound small-molecule metabolome

  • Nan Chen,
  • Zeting Jiao,
  • Ke Xie,
  • Junying Liu,
  • Peng Yao,
  • Yangchao Luo,
  • Tiehua Zhang,
  • Ken Cheng,
  • Changhui Zhao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 107, no. 12
pp. 10462 – 10480

Abstract

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ABSTRACT: Tea drinks have a long history and milk is often added to enhance the taste and nutritional value, whereas the interaction between the tea bioactive compounds with proteins has not been systematically investigated. In this study, a milk-tea model was prepared by mixing green tea solution with milk and then heating at 100°C for 15 min. The milk tea was then measured using biochemical assay, antioxidant detection kit, and microscopy, as well as HPLC-quadrupole time-of-flight-MS/MS after ultrafiltration. The study found that as the concentration of milk protein increased in the milk-tea system, the total phenol-protein binding rate rose from 19.63% to 51.08%, which led to a decrease in free polyphenol content. This decrease of polyphenol was also revealed in the antioxidant capacity, including 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl radical scavenging ability and ferric ion reducing antioxidant power, in a dose-dependent manner. Untargeted metabolomics results revealed that the majority of small-molecule compounds/polyphenols in tea, such as epigallocatechin gallate, (-)-epicatechin gallate, and catechin 5,7,-di-O-gallate, bound to milk proteins and were removed by ultrafiltration after addition of milk and heat treatment. The SDS-PAGE and Native-PAGE results further indicated that small-molecule compounds in tea formed covalent and noncovalent complexes by binding to milk proteins. All of these results partially explained that milk proteins form conjugates with tea small-molecule compounds. Consistently, the particle size of the tea-milk system increased as the tea concentration increased, but the polymer dispersity index decreased, indicating a more uniform molecular weight distribution of the particles in the system. Addition of milk protein enhanced foam ability in the milk-tea system but reduced foam stability. In summary, our findings suggest that the proportion of milk added to tea infusion needs to be considered to maintain the quality of milk tea from multiple perspectives, including stability, nutritional quality, and antioxidant activity.

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