Fernando Luís Barroso da Silva, Paolo Carloni, David Cheung, Grazia Cottone, Serena Donnini, E Allen Foegeding, Muhammad Gulzar, Jean Christophe Jacquier, Vladimir Lobaskin, Donal MacKernan, Zeynab Mohammad Hosseini Naveh, Ravi Radhakrishnan, Erik E Santiso
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Understanding and Controlling Food Protein Structure and Function in Foods: Perspectives from Experiments and Computer Simulations.
The structure and interactions of proteins play a critical role in determining the quality attributes of many foods, beverages, and pharmaceutical products. Incorporating a multiscale understanding of the structure-function relationships of proteins can provide greater insight into, and control of, the relevant processes at play. Combining data from experimental measurements, human sensory panels, and computer simulations through machine learning allows the construction of statistical models relating nanoscale properties of proteins to the physicochemical properties, physiological outcomes, and tastes of foods. This review highlights several examples of advanced computer simulations at molecular, mesoscale, and multiscale levels that shed light on the mechanisms at play in foods, thereby facilitating their control. It includes a practical simulation toolbox for those new to in silico modeling.
期刊介绍:
Since 2010, the Annual Review of Food Science and Technology has been a key source for current developments in the multidisciplinary field. The covered topics span food microbiology, food-borne pathogens, and fermentation; food engineering, chemistry, biochemistry, rheology, and sensory properties; novel ingredients and nutrigenomics; emerging technologies in food processing and preservation; and applications of biotechnology and nanomaterials in food systems.