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Publication no. C-2002-0405-05R
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ARTICLE
Lipid Extraction Process on Texturized Soy Flour and Wheat Gluten
Protein-Protein Interactions in a Dough Matrix.
K. J. Ryan (1), C. L.
Homco-Ryan (1), J. Jenson (1), K. L. Robbins (1), C. Prestat (1), and M. S.
Brewer (2,3). (1) Graduate research assistants, Department of Food Science and
Human Nutrition, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL. (2) Associate professor,
Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, University of Illinois, Urbana,
IL. (3) Corresponding author. E-mail: <msbrewer@uiuc.edu> Cereal Chem.
79(3):434-438. Accepted October 24, 2001. Copyright 2002 American Association of
Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Protein-protein interactions between wheat flour and solvent-extracted (SE)
or nonsolvent extracted (NSE) texturized soy flours were compared. Doughs were
prepared to contain varying ratios of texturized soy flour in combination with
wheat flour. Sucrose esters (2.5%) were included in several formulations. Doughs
were fractionated into soluble and insoluble fractions at pH 4.7 and pH 6.1.
Fractions were dried, powdered, and analyzed using SDS-PAGE and
spectrophotometric techniques. Electrophoretic evaluation indicated interactions
between wheat gluten proteins and texturized soy proteins in the absence of
sucrose esters. Electrophoretic gels of the wheat-soy flour mixtures maintained
a characteristic soy protein band after acidification to the soy protein
isoelectric point. Inclusion of sucrose esters increased the interaction.
Texturization conferred effects similar to that of sucrose ester on both forms
of lipid-extracted soy. Sulfhydryl analyses using 7-chloro-4-nitrobenzo-2-oxa-4,
3-diazole (NBD-Cl) revealed no change in the relative amount of sulfhydryl
groups present in doughs prepared from either the texturized soy flours or the
doughs containing equal amounts of wheat starch. These data indicate that
interactions between soy protein from texturized soy flours and wheat proteins
are not covalent.
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