Descrição
Proteins in white wine could become insoluble and precipitate causing the appearance of a haze
in bottled wine. Protein instability may be due to intrinsically or extrinsically factor such as
protein molecular weight, isoelectric point, ionic strength, alcohol degree and wine pH or
storage temperature. These modifications may occur during aging, storage or when diverse
wines are blended. The type and concentration of proteins in the wine depends on grape variety,
maturation degree and winemaking operations (pre-fem1entative grape maceration, application
of tannins, enzymes or bentonite fining). Usually, the treatment for wine protein instability is
sodium bentonite fining. The adsorption of wine proteins onto bentonite is due to the cationic
exchange capacity of bentonite, which carries a net negative charge and the wine proteins are
mostly positive charged at wine pH, and thus can be exchanged onto bentonite. Sometimes even
with high level of sodium bentonite wines do not stabilize.
Thus, the main purpose of this work is to understand the interaction of different types of
bentonites, tannins, carboxylmethylcellulose (CMC) and mannoproteins on white wine protein
stability, to get new approaches to stabilize them. Some trials were performed in four white
wines with high protein instability. Preliminary results showed that sodium bentonite and
mannoproteins increase protein stability, in opposition, CMC and tannins seems to increase
turbidity after stability tests, which means more instability. Final results could provide important
information to the wine industry to select alternative treatments to remove unstable proteins to
maintain or improve wine quality.