DOI: 10.3390/gels12060548 ISSN: 2310-2861

Effects of Acid Modification on Physicochemical Properties of Soybean and Citrus Dietary Fibers and Their Application in Probiotic-Fermented Soy Protein Gels

Youxin Yan, Meixin Wang, Yuan Zhang, Ke Zhang, Feng Xue

Dietary fibers are valuable food components with documented health benefits, yet their native compact and highly crystalline structures often result in low water hydration, poor adsorption capacity, and limited bioactivity. Chemical modification offers a promising strategy to overcome these functional limitations by disrupting the dense structure and exposing active groups. This study aimed to investigate the effects of acid modification on the physicochemical properties of soybean and citrus dietary fibers and to evaluate the performance of the modified fibers in probiotic-fermented soy protein gels. Compared with native fibers, modified fibers exhibited reduced particle size, rougher and more porous microstructures, and increased exposure of hydroxyl groups. Consequently, they showed significantly (p < 0.05) enhanced hydration capacity (increased by 92–541%), antioxidant activity (increased by 15–65%), cholesterol adsorption (increased by 16–75%), and α-amylase inhibition (increased by 26–62%). When incorporated into soy protein-based gels, the modified fibers, particularly those from soybean, lowered gel pH, increased water holding capacity, gel strength, apparent viscosity, and storage modulus, while reducing strain, indicating improved gel network integrity. These findings indicate that acid modification effectively unlocks the functional potential of dietary fibers, positioning the modified fibers, especially from soybean, as promising prebiotic ingredients for plant-based fermented gel products.

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