| Literature DB >> 21048865 |
Anne Y Castro Marques1, Mário Roberto Maróstica, Gláucia Maria Pastore.
Abstract
The growing consumer demand for healthier products has stimulated the development of nutritionally enhanced meat products. However, this can result in undesirable sensory consequences to the product, such as texture alterations in low-salt and low-phosphate meat foods. Additionally, in the meat industry, economical aspects have stimulated researchers to use all the animal parts to maximize yields of marketable products. This paper aimed to show some advances in the use of enzymes in meat processing, particularly the application of the proteolytic enzymes transglutaminase and phytases, associated with nutritional, technological, and environmental improvements.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21048865 PMCID: PMC2963809 DOI: 10.4061/2010/480923
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Enzyme Res ISSN: 2090-0414
Use of proteolytic enzymes for bioactive peptides production in meat foods.
| Product | Conditions | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| ACE of protein hydrolysates from sardine ( | Sardine: heads and viscera. Enzymes: alcalase, chymotrypsin, | Sardinelle proteins were digested by proteases and the ACE inhibitory activity was markedly increased. The degrees of hydrolysis and the inhibitory activities of ACE increased with increasing proteolysis time. The sardinelle hydrolysis with the crude enzyme extract from sardine viscera resulted in the production of the hydrolysate with the highest ACE inhibitory activity. | [ |
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| ACE of protein hydrolysates from shark meat hydrolysate | Enzyme: | The hydrolysate of shark meat was rich with ACE inhibitory peptides, and 3 novel peptides with high ACE inhibitory activity were identified (Cys-Phe, Glu-Tyr, and Phe-Glu). | [ |
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| ACE of protein hydrolysates from muscle of cuttlefish ( | Enzymes: trypsin, chymotrypsin, sardinelle protease, cuttlefish protease and smooth hounds protease. Enzyme/substrate concentration: 3 U/mg. | The most active hydrolysate was obtained with the crude protease extract from the hepatopancreas of cuttlefish (64.47 ± 1.0% at 2 mg of dry weight/mL) with a degree of hydrolysis of 8%. Three novel peptides with high ACE-inhibitory activity were formed: Val-Tyr-Ala-Pro, Val-Ile-Ile-Phe, and Met-Ala-Trp. | [ |
Studies using microbial tranglutaminase (MTGase) in meat food.
| Product | Conditions | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken and beef sausages | Proportion of MTGase to MHC* = 1 : 500. Heat treatment: 40°C/30 minutes using a thermo-minder; 80°C/30 minutes, using a water bath shaker. *MHC: myosin heavy chain. | MTGase affected the breaking strength score in both meat types, especially for beef cooked at 80°C. The functional properties of MTGase make it a good protein-binding agent, positively helping the functionality of proteins to improve the texture and gelation of sausages. Some variation in gel improvement level between chicken and beef sausages were observed, in response to MTGase, as well as to the original glutamyl and lysine contents. | [ |
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| Dry-cured ham | Treatments: no treatment (control); immersion in a saline (NaCl with 200 ppm of KNO3 and 100 ppm of NaNO2) aqueous solution (3%, w/v) for 10 minutes at 4°C; and even distribution of a mixture of salts (NaCl with 200 ppm of KNO3 and 100 ppm of NaNO2) on the surfaces for 1 minute and after 10 minutes of setting time. Binding temperature: 0°C, 7°C and 24°C. MTGase: powder and liquid (MTGase at 0.1% in solution of NaCl 3%). | MTGase provided enough stable cross-links in the course of the salting and drying processes. The highest binding force and rate were obtained by treating the meat surface with a mixture of salts (NaCl including KNO3 and NaNO2) then adding MTGase. | [ |
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| Fish ( | High pressure treatment (300 MPa, 25°C, 15 minutes), combined with a prior or a subsequent setting step (25°C, 2 hours), 1.5% chitosan and/or 0.02% MTGase. | MTGase led to an increase in hardness and a considerable decrease in elasticity and breaking deformation. MTGase activity was greater when setting was applied before pressurization than after; moreover, there was no synergism derived from the addition of chitosan and MTGase together. | [ |
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| Ground beef | Preparation A: MTG (1 g/100 g) and maltodextrin (99 g/100 g); Preparation B: MTG (0.5 g/100 g), SC (60 g/100 g) and maltodextrin (39.5 g/100 g). MTG: product weight/meat weight. | MTG with sodium caseinate (SC) led to a slight increase in peak temperature (Tmax) values of myosin. MTGase treatment caused a slight decrease in Tmax values of myosin | [ |
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| Restructured cooked pork shoulder | Phosphate-free product. Salt levels: 2% and 1%; MTG: 0%, 0.075% and 0.15%. Processing conditions: 72°C/65′ minutes and 78°C/65′ minutes. | MTG affected consistency and overall acceptability of the product. MTG had no effect on firmness, juiciness, color, odor, taste and saltiness. MTG can be used at a level of 0.15% with reduced salt level (1%) and processing at 72°C/65 minutes to produce phosphate-free restructured cooked pork shoulder with acceptable sensory attributes. | [ |