SOLUBILITY-DIGESTIBILITY RELATIONSHIP OF LEGUME PROTEINS

Citation
M. Carbonaro et al., SOLUBILITY-DIGESTIBILITY RELATIONSHIP OF LEGUME PROTEINS, Journal of agricultural and food chemistry, 45(9), 1997, pp. 3387-3394
Citations number
36
Categorie Soggetti
Food Science & Tenology",Agriculture,"Chemistry Applied
ISSN journal
00218561
Volume
45
Issue
9
Year of publication
1997
Pages
3387 - 3394
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8561(1997)45:9<3387:SROLP>2.0.ZU;2-D
Abstract
Protein solubility of raw and cooked faba bean, lentil, chickpea, and dry bean was tested in water and in NaCl in the pH range 1.0-13.0. The solubility of all legume proteins in water typically increased on bot h sides of pH 4.0. In NaCl, only solubility of raw dry bean proteins w as improved. A marked reduction in protein solubility was observed aft er cooking of all legumes up to pH 10.0, where solubilization occurred , suggesting that it was dependent on deprotonation of lysine and argi nine. Amino acid analysis showed that the protein fraction that retain ed solubility in water (pH 6.5) after cooking had a high amount of arg inine and glutamic acid, low levels of hydrophobic amino acids, and, t herefore, a much higher charge density than proteins in the whole flou r. The SE-HPLC profiles indicated that water-soluble raw faba bean and lentil had main protein peaks of a higher molecular weight than those of dry bean or chickpea, thus suggesting a higher trend toward associ ation. In vitro protein digestibility of faba bean and lentil, unlike that of chickpea and dry bean, was not improved upon cooking. The resu lts indicate that, in addition to hydrophobic forces, basic residues a re involved in the stabilization of heat-induced aggregates of legume proteins, possibly contributing to their low digestibility.