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Publication no. C-2003-0210-04R
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ARTICLE
Yield and Phytosterol Composition of Oil Extracted from Grain Sorghum and Its
Wet-Milled Fractions.
Vijay Singh (1,3), Robert A. Moreau (2), and Kevin B. Hicks (2). (1) Assistant
professor, Department of Agricultural Engineering, University of Illinois,
Urbana, IL 61801. (2) Lead scientist and research leader, U.S. Department of
Agriculture, Eastern Regional Research Center, Agricultural Research Service,
Wyndmoor, PA 19038. Current address: 360G, AESB, 1304 West Pennsylvania Avenue,
Urbana, IL 61801. Names are necessary to report factually on available data;
however, the USDA neither guarantees nor warrants the standard of the product,
and the use of the name by the USDA implies no approval of the product to the
exclusion of others that may also be suitable. (3) Corresponding author. Phone:
217-333-9510. Fax: 217-244-0323. E-mail: <vsingh@uiuc.edu> Cereal Chem.
80(2):126-129. Accepted November 15, 2002. This article is in the public domain
and not copyrightable. It may be freely reprinted with customary crediting of
the source. American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc., 2003.
Corn fiber contains an oil with high levels of three potential
cholesterol-lowering phytosterol compounds. Little information is available
about the levels and types of phytosterols in sorghum. In this study,
phytosterols were evaluated in grain sorhgum and its wet-milled fractions and
were compared with the phytosterols in corn. The study showed that sorghum
kernels can provide a significant source of two phytosterol classes, free
phytosterols (St) and fatty acyl phytosterol esters (St:E). Most of these
phytosterols are concentrated in the wet-milled fiber fraction followed by the
germ fraction. In addition to phytosterols, other lipid classes such as wax
esters and an aldehyde (50% C28 and 50% C30) are also present in the sorghum
oil. Comparison of sorghum and corn kernels show that corn has 72-93% more
phytosterols than sorghum.
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