Canola Seed Protein: Pretreatment, Extraction, Structure, Physicochemical and Functional Characteristics

Foods. 2024 Apr 28;13(9):1357. doi: 10.3390/foods13091357.

Abstract

The rapid growth of the global population has led to an unprecedented demand for dietary protein. Canola seeds, being a widely utilized oil resource, generate substantial meal by-products following oil extraction. Fortunately, canola meals are rich in protein. In this present review, foremost attention is directed towards summarizing the characteristics of canola seed and canola seed protein. Afterwards, points of discussion related to pretreatment include an introduction to pulsed electric field treatment (PEF), microwave treatment (MC), and ultrasound treatment (UL). Then, the extraction method is illustrated, including alkaline extraction, isoelectric precipitation, acid precipitation, micellization (salt extraction), and dry fractionation and tribo-electrostatic separation. Finally, the structural complexity, physicochemical properties, and functional capabilities of rapeseed seeds, as well as the profound impact of various applications of rapeseed proteins, are elaborated. Through a narrative review of recent research findings, this paper aims to enhance a comprehensive understanding of the potential of canola seed protein as a valuable nutritional supplement, highlighting the pivotal role played by various extraction methods. Additionally, it sheds light on the broad spectrum of applications where canola protein demonstrates its versatility and indispensability as a resource.

Keywords: canola seed protein; essential amino acids; extraction; physicochemical properties; pretreatment.

Publication types

  • Review

Grants and funding

This research was financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31972080, 31500652), Science and Technology Project of Hebei Education Department (BJK2023118), Hebei Provincial Introduction of Overseas Students Funding Project (C20200363), and Natural Science Foundation of Hebei Province (C2019203484), and the contribution of the financial support from the Canola Science Cluster program, Canola Council of Canada, and Guelph Food Research Center, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada (AAFC Project registered No. PSS2723).