| Literature DB >> 27041313 |
Mingzhu Zhuang1, Lianzhu Lin2, Mouming Zhao2, Yi Dong1, Dongxiao Sun-Waterhouse2, Huiping Chen1, Chaoying Qiu3, Guowan Su4.
Abstract
Five tasty peptides were separated from soy sauce, by sensory-guided fractionation, using macroporous resin, medium-pressure liquid chromatography and reverse phase-high performance liquid chromatography, and identified by ultra-performance liquid chromatography tandem mass-spectrometry as ALPEEV, LPEEV, AQALQAQA, EQQQQ and EAGIQ (which originated from glycinin A1bB2-445, glycinin A1bB2-445, cobyric acid synthase, leucine-tRNA ligase and glycoprotein glucosyltransferase, respectively). LPEEV, AQALQAQA and EQQQQ tasted umami with threshold values of 0.43, 1.25 and 0.76mmol/l, respectively. ALPEEV and EAGIQ had minimal umami taste, but ALPEEV, EAGIQ and LPEEV showed umami-enhancement with a threshold estimated at 1.52, 1.94 and 3.41mmol/l, respectively. In addition, the synthetic peptides showed much better sensory taste than mixtures of their constitutive amino acids. It indicated that peptides might play an important role in the umami taste of soy sauce.Entities:
Keywords: Amino acid sequence; Peptide; Separation; Soy sauce; Umami taste; Umami-enhancement
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27041313 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2016.03.058
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514