Osaka Metropolitan University researchers have discovered yeast cell wall proteins exhibit emulsifying action, offering alternative to emulsifiers derived from milk and other known allergens
From Osaka Metropolitan University 21/12/24 (first released 16/12/24)

Mention emulsifiers and many people might be unaware what they are used for, but they are present in many daily products, from food to cosmetics.
They keep substances that don’t usually mix, like water and oil, from separating and are either synthetically made or derived from milk, eggs, and soybeans, which are known as major food allergens.
Thus, Osaka Metropolitan University researchers are looking at yeast proteins as emulsifiers.
A research group led by Graduate School of Engineering Professor Masayuki Azuma and Associate Professor Yoshihiro Ojima previously showed that three yeast cell wall proteins (Gas1, Gas3, and Gas5) have high emulsifying activity.
However, they are strongly bound and anchored to the cell wall, so this time they found emulsifying proteins that can be easily freed from the yeast.
Of these proteins, Fba1 showed the strongest emulsifying action.
On the cell surface there also reportedly exists the protein Tdh2, which in the experiments displayed properties as strong as that of Fba1 and comparable to that of casein, a commercial emulsifier usually derived from milk.
“The identification of the major emulsifying proteins in yeast cell wall components is expected to promote the use of these yeast extracts,” stated Professor Azuma.
“By increasing the productivity of the identified proteins, we expect that they can be applied as purified emulsifying proteins.”
The findings were published in Food Hydrocolloids.
More info
You may also be curious about:
-
Groups of AI agents spontaneously form their own social norms
-
A new study provides insights into cleaning up noise in quantum entanglement
-
Brain scans reveal what happens in the mind when insight strikes
-
Scientists define geological conditions for finding natural clean hydrogen
-
Anticancer mechanisms of indigenous Nigerian whole foods
-
NASA’s Magellan mission reveals possible tectonic activity on Venus
-
New study finds that tea and chocolate may help lower blood pressure
-
Modifiable pedestrian and roadside facilities reduce crash likelihood
-
Scientists film mouse heart forming in 3D earlier than ever before
-
Chimpanzees use medicinal leaves to perform first aid
-
Change your location to jumpstart creativity
-
AI tools may be weakening the quality of published research, study warns