Abstract
Enzymatic hydrolysis of food proteins generally changes the techno-functional, nutritional, and organoleptic properties of hydrolyzed proteins. As a result, protein hydrolysates have an important interest in the food industries. However, they tend to be characterized by a bitter taste and some off-flavors, which limit their use in the food industry. These tastes and aromas come from peptides, amino acids, and volatile compounds generated during hydrolysis. In this article, sixteen more or less bitter enzymatic hydrolysates produced from a milk protein liquid fraction enriched in micellar caseins using commercially available, food-grade proteases were subjected to a sensory analysis using a trained and validated sensory panel combined to a peptidomics approach based on the peptide characterization by reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography, high-resolution mass spectrometry, and bioinformatics software. The comparison between the sensory characteristics and the principal components of the principal component analysis (PCA) of mass spectrometry data reveals that peptidomics constitutes a convenient, valuable, fast, and economic intermediate method to evaluating the bitterness of enzymatic hydrolysates, as a trained sensory panel can do it.
Funder
French National Research Agency
Subject
Plant Science,Health Professions (miscellaneous),Health(social science),Microbiology,Food Science
Reference41 articles.
1. Peptidomic screening of bitter and nonbitter casein hydrolysate fractions for insulinogenic peptides
2. The Use of Milk and Milk Constituents in Pharmaceutical Preparations [Proteins; Immunoglobulins; Milk Digestion];Manson,1980
3. Preclinical and clinical evaluation with casein hydrolysate products;Cordano,1985
4. Biologically active peptides and enzymatic approaches to their production
5. The Impact of the Enzymic Hydrolysis Process on Recovery and Use of Proteins;Petersen,1981
Cited by
10 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献