Foods based on sweet lupin proteins are gaining attention from industry and consumers because of their possible role in the prevention of cardiovascular disease. When promoting lupin-based foods for inclusion in a daily diet, the thermal damage suffered during processing is of relevance to the bioactive and nutritional quality of the food product. N-(2-furoylmethyl)-L-lysine (furosine) quantification demonstrates that currently available sweet lupin protein isolates have a thermal damage comparable to or lower than other traditional food ingredients, and are a good source of lysine in non-dairy products. In lupin-based foods claiming to have cholesterol-lowering potential, shotgun proteomics offers itself as a fast and effective screening method for assessing the biological availability of active peptides. Such a method is readily applicable to other legume-enriched food products
Parameters for the evaluation of the thermal damage and nutraceutical potential of lupin-based ingredients and food products / A. Arnoldi, D. Resta, F. Brambilla, G. Boschin, A. D’Agostina, E. Sirtori, F. O’Kane. - In: MOLECULAR NUTRITION & FOOD RESEARCH. - ISSN 1613-4125. - 51:4(2007), pp. 431-436.
Parameters for the evaluation of the thermal damage and nutraceutical potential of lupin-based ingredients and food products
A. ArnoldiPrimo
;D. RestaSecondo
;F. Brambilla;G. Boschin;A. D’Agostina;E. SirtoriPenultimo
;F. O’KaneUltimo
2007
Abstract
Foods based on sweet lupin proteins are gaining attention from industry and consumers because of their possible role in the prevention of cardiovascular disease. When promoting lupin-based foods for inclusion in a daily diet, the thermal damage suffered during processing is of relevance to the bioactive and nutritional quality of the food product. N-(2-furoylmethyl)-L-lysine (furosine) quantification demonstrates that currently available sweet lupin protein isolates have a thermal damage comparable to or lower than other traditional food ingredients, and are a good source of lysine in non-dairy products. In lupin-based foods claiming to have cholesterol-lowering potential, shotgun proteomics offers itself as a fast and effective screening method for assessing the biological availability of active peptides. Such a method is readily applicable to other legume-enriched food productsPubblicazioni consigliate
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