Food Biochemistry and Food Processing (2 edition)

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Chymosin in Cheese Making


V. V. Mistry


Introduction
Chymosin
Rennet Manufacture
Chymosin Production by Genetic Technology
Rennet Production by Separation of Bovine Pepsin
Rennet Substitutes
Animal
Plant
Microbial
Chymosin Action on Milk
Milk Coagulation and Protein Hydrolysis by Chymosin
Factors Affecting Chymosin Action in Milk
Chymosin Concentration
Temperature
pH
Calcium
Milk Processing
Genetic Variants
Effect of Chymosin on Proteolysis in Cheese
Effect of Chymosin on Cheese Texture
References

INTRODUCTION


Cheeses are classified into those that are aged for the develop-
ment of flavor and body over time and those that are ready for
consumption shortly after manufacture. Many cheese varieties
are also expected to develop certain functional characteristics
either immediately after manufacture or by the end of the aging
period. It is fascinating that what starts in the cheese vat, as a
white liquid that is composed of many nutrients, emerges as
a completely transformed compact mass, cheese, sometimes

Reviewers of this chapter were Dr. Ashraf Hassan, Department of Dairy Science,
South Dakota State University, Brookings, and Dr. Lloyd Metzger, Department
of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Minnesota, St. Paul.

colored yellow, sometimes white, and sometimes with various
types of mold on the surface or within the cheese mass
(Kosikowski and Mistry 1997). Some cheeses may also exhibit
a unique textural character that turns stringy when heated, and
others may have shiny eyes. Each cheese also has unique flavor
qualities. Thus, cheese is a complex biological material whose
characteristics are specifically tailored by the cheese maker
through judicious blends of enzymes, starter bacteria, acid, and
temperature.
Milk is a homogeneous liquid in which components exist in
soluble, emulsion, or colloidal form. The manufacture of cheese
involves a phase change from liquid (milk) to solid (cheese).
This phase change occurs under carefully selected conditions
that alter the physicochemical environment of milk such that the
milk system is destabilized and is no longer homogeneous. In
many fresh cheeses, this conversion takes place with the help of
acid through isoelectric precipitation of casein and subsequent
temperature treatments and draining for the conversion of liquid
to solid. In the case of most ripened cheeses, this conversion oc-
curs enzymatically at higher pH and involves the transformation
of the calcium paracaseinate complex through controlled lactic
acid fermentation. Later on, the products of this reaction and
starter bacteria interact for the development of flavor and tex-
ture. All this is the result of the action of the enzyme chymosin
(Andren 2003).

CHYMOSIN


Chymosin, rennet, and rennin are often used interchangeably to
refer to this enzyme. The latter, rennin, should not be confused
with renin, which is an enzyme associated with kidneys and does
not clot milk. Chymosin is the biochemical name of the enzyme
that was formerly known as rennin. It belongs to the group of
aspartic acid proteinases, Enzyme classification (EC) 3.4.23, that
have a high content of dicarboxylic and hydroxyamino acids and

Food Biochemistry and Food Processing, Second Edition. Edited by Benjamin K. Simpson, Leo M.L. Nollet, Fidel Toldr ́a, Soottawat Benjakul, Gopinadhan Paliyath and Y.H. Hui.
©C2012 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Published 2012 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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