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Publication no. C-2002-1203-02R
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ARTICLE
Turbidity Assay for Rapid and Efficient Identification of High Protein
Digestibility Sorghum Lines (1).
Adam Aboubacar (2), John D. Axtell (3),
Lexington Nduulu (3), and Bruce R. Hamaker (2,4). (1) Paper 16548 of the Purdue
University Agricultural Research Programs. (2) Department of Food Science and
the Whistler Center for Carbohydrate Research, Purdue University, West
Lafayette, IN. (3) Department of Agronomy, Purdue University, West Lafayette,
IN. (4) Corresponding author. E-mail: <hamakerb@foodsci.purdue.edu> Cereal Chem.
80(1):40-44. Accepted July 28, 2002. Copyright 2003 American Association of
Cereal Chemists, Inc.
Recently, our laboratory reported a protein digestibility assay based on
SDS-PAGE that distinguishes mutant high protein digestibility from wild-type
sorghum lines. Using that assay, high protein digestibility sorghum lines were
identified both qualitatively (visual observation) and quantitatively by
measuring the SDS-PAGE band intensity of the undigested a-kafirin protein. Here,
we report on a new turbidity assay that can be used for an even quicker
quantitation of the undigested proteins with much higher throughput for
screening purposes. Proteins remaining after 1 hr of pepsin digestion were
extracted with a buffer of SDS, 2-mercaptoethanol, and borate and an aliquot of
the extract was precipitated using 72% trichloroacetic acid (TCA). Absorbance of
the resulting turbid solution was then read at 562 nm. Lower readings
corresponded to more digestible lines. The turbidity of the suspensions
developed quickly and reached a plateau at approximately 5 min for high protein
digestibility lines and 10 min for wild-type lines. The turbid solutions
remained stable for at least 1 hr. Two distinct groups, wild-type and high
protein digestibility sorghum lines, were obtained when the assay was compared
with a standard pepsin digestibility procedure and to our recently developed
SDS-PAGE assay. A comparison with the bicinchoninic acid (BCA) assay of protein
quantitation indicated that the turbidity assay is more efficient in
differentiating between wild-type and high protein digestibility sorghum lines.
We have further refined the turbidity assay for microtiter plate analysis making
it possible for a single operator to analyze approximately 200 sorghum lines per day,
compared to 60 lines when using the SDS-PAGE assay.
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