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DOI: 10.1094/CC-83-0057
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ARTICLE
Distribution of Glutathione in Millstreams and Relationships to Chemical and
Baking Properties of Flour.
D. Every (1,2), S. C. Morrison (1), L. D. Simmons (1), and M. P. Ross (1). (1)
New Zealand Institute for Crop & Food Research Limited, Private Bag 4704,
Christchurch, New Zealand. (2) Corresponding author. E-mail: <everyd@crop.cri.nz>
Cereal Chem. 83(1):57-61. Accepted August 2, 2005. Copyright 2006 AACC
International, Inc.
Fourteen millstream flours, a straight-run flour, bran, pollard, and germ were
prepared separately from two Australian and two New Zealand wheat cultivars
using a 650 kg/hr pilot roller mill. Glutathione (GSH) and oxidized glutathione
(GSSG) were measured in all samples. The Australian cultivars had higher levels
of GSH and GSSG than the New Zealand cultivars, and in all cultivars the levels
in pollard and germ were considerably higher than in flour samples. Generally,
the early break flours and early reduction flours had lower GSSH/GSSG levels
than the tail-end break and reduction flours. There was a strong correlation
between GSH/GSSG and ash content in millstream flours, which indicated that much
of the GSH/GSSG in the flour was likely to have derived from contamination by
bran, aleurone (pollard), and germ. There were also moderate to strong
correlations between GSH/GSSG and the cysteine content of all proteins in flour.
GSH/GSSG correlated strongly with the albumin and globulin content of flour but
not with gliadin and glutenin. The volume and crumb texture properties of bread
made with millstream flours in the absence of ascorbic acid (AA) were negatively
correlated with GSH/GSSG. The change in bread volume and texture properties when
AA was added to dough (baking improver effect of AA), however, were poorly
correlated with GSH/GSSG.
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