Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by Proteases

Broken rice is an underutilized by-product of milling. Proteins prepared from broken rice by treatments with alkaline protease and papain have been characterized with regard to nutritional and functional properties. The protein content and the protein recovery were 56.45 and 75.45 % for alkaline pro...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lixia Hou, Yongyi Zhu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Zagreb 2010-01-01
Series:Food Technology and Biotechnology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/74735
id doaj-1c29eef6ad824b53949d5883636bc1b3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1c29eef6ad824b53949d5883636bc1b32020-11-24T21:51:51ZengUniversity of ZagrebFood Technology and Biotechnology1330-98621334-26062010-01-014815055Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by ProteasesLixia Hou0Yongyi Zhu1Yongyi Zhu2College of Food Science and Technology, Henan University of Technology, Zhengzhou 450052, PR ChinaCollege of Food Science and Technology, Henan University of Technology, Zhengzhou 450052, PR ChinaCollege of Food Science and Technology, Henan University of Technology, Zhengzhou 450052, PR ChinaBroken rice is an underutilized by-product of milling. Proteins prepared from broken rice by treatments with alkaline protease and papain have been characterized with regard to nutritional and functional properties. The protein content and the protein recovery were 56.45 and 75.45 % for alkaline protease treatment, and 65.45 and 46.32 % for papain treatment, respectively. Protease treatment increased the lysine and valine content, leading to a more balanced amino acid profile. Broken rice proteins had high emulsifying capacity, 58.3–71.6 % at neutral pH, and adequate water holding capacity, ranging from 1.96 to 2.93 g/g of proteins. At pH=7.0, the broken rice protein had the highest water holding capacity and the best interfacial activities (emulsifying capacity, emulsifying stability, foaming capacity and foaming stability), which may be the result of the higher solubility at pH=7.0. The interfacial activities increased with the increase in the mass fraction of broken rice proteins. The proteins prepared by the papain treatment had higher water holding capacity (p>0.05), emulsifying capacity (p<0.05) and foaming capacity (p>0.05) than alkaline protease treatment at the same pH or mass fraction. To test the fortification of food products with broken rice proteins, pork sausages containing the proteins were prepared. Higher yield of the sausages was obtained with the increased content of broken rice proteins, in the range of 2.0–9.0 %. The results indicate that broken rice proteins have potential to be used as the protein fortification ingredient for food products.http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/74735broken rice proteinnutritional propertiesfunctional properties
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lixia Hou
Yongyi Zhu
Yongyi Zhu
spellingShingle Lixia Hou
Yongyi Zhu
Yongyi Zhu
Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by Proteases
Food Technology and Biotechnology
broken rice protein
nutritional properties
functional properties
author_facet Lixia Hou
Yongyi Zhu
Yongyi Zhu
author_sort Lixia Hou
title Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by Proteases
title_short Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by Proteases
title_full Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by Proteases
title_fullStr Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by Proteases
title_full_unstemmed Characterization and Preparation of Broken Rice Proteins Modified by Proteases
title_sort characterization and preparation of broken rice proteins modified by proteases
publisher University of Zagreb
series Food Technology and Biotechnology
issn 1330-9862
1334-2606
publishDate 2010-01-01
description Broken rice is an underutilized by-product of milling. Proteins prepared from broken rice by treatments with alkaline protease and papain have been characterized with regard to nutritional and functional properties. The protein content and the protein recovery were 56.45 and 75.45 % for alkaline protease treatment, and 65.45 and 46.32 % for papain treatment, respectively. Protease treatment increased the lysine and valine content, leading to a more balanced amino acid profile. Broken rice proteins had high emulsifying capacity, 58.3–71.6 % at neutral pH, and adequate water holding capacity, ranging from 1.96 to 2.93 g/g of proteins. At pH=7.0, the broken rice protein had the highest water holding capacity and the best interfacial activities (emulsifying capacity, emulsifying stability, foaming capacity and foaming stability), which may be the result of the higher solubility at pH=7.0. The interfacial activities increased with the increase in the mass fraction of broken rice proteins. The proteins prepared by the papain treatment had higher water holding capacity (p>0.05), emulsifying capacity (p<0.05) and foaming capacity (p>0.05) than alkaline protease treatment at the same pH or mass fraction. To test the fortification of food products with broken rice proteins, pork sausages containing the proteins were prepared. Higher yield of the sausages was obtained with the increased content of broken rice proteins, in the range of 2.0–9.0 %. The results indicate that broken rice proteins have potential to be used as the protein fortification ingredient for food products.
topic broken rice protein
nutritional properties
functional properties
url http://hrcak.srce.hr/file/74735
work_keys_str_mv AT lixiahou characterizationandpreparationofbrokenriceproteinsmodifiedbyproteases
AT yongyizhu characterizationandpreparationofbrokenriceproteinsmodifiedbyproteases
AT yongyizhu characterizationandpreparationofbrokenriceproteinsmodifiedbyproteases
_version_ 1725878115526246400