Literature DB >> 29192707

Polyphenol-enriched berry extracts naturally modulate reactive proteins in model foods.

Mary Ann Lila1, Maggie Schneider, Amy Devlin, Nathalie Plundrich, Scott Laster, E Allen Foegeding.   

Abstract

Healthy foods like polyphenol-rich berries and high quality edible proteins are in demand in today's functional food marketplace, but it can be difficult to formulate convenient food products with physiologically-relevant amounts of these ingredients and still maintain product quality. In part, this is because proteins can interact with other food ingredients and precipitate destabilizing events, which can disrupt food structure and diminish shelf life. Proteins in foods can also interact with human receptors to provoke adverse consequences such as allergies. When proteins and polyphenols were pre-aggregated into stable colloidal particles prior to use as ingredients, highly palatable food formulations (with reduced astringency of polyphenols) could be prepared, and the overall structural properties of food formulations were significantly improved. All of the nutritive and phytoactive benefits of the proteins and concentrated polyphenols remained highly bioavailable, but the protein molecules in the particle matrix did not self-aggregate into networks or react with other food ingredients. Both the drainage half-life (a marker of structural stability) and the yield stress (resistance to flow) of model foams made with the protein-polyphenol particles were increased in a dose-dependent manner. Of high significance in this complexation process, the reactive allergenic epitopes of certain proteins were effectively blunted by binding with polyphenols, attenuating the allergenicity of the food proteins. Porcine macrophages produced TNF-α proinflammatory cytokine when provoked with whey protein, but, this response was blocked completely when the cells were stimulated with particles that complexed whey protein with cinnamon-derived polyphenols. Cytokine and chemokine production characteristic of allergic reactions were blocked by the polyphenols, allowing for the potential creation of hypoallergenic protein-berry polyphenol enriched foods.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 29192707     DOI: 10.1039/c7fo00883j

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Food Funct        ISSN: 2042-6496            Impact factor:   5.396


  2 in total

Review 1.  A Comprehensive Review on the Interaction of Milk Protein Concentrates with Plant-Based Polyphenolics.

Authors:  Mansuri M Tosif; Agnieszka Najda; Aarti Bains; Thummalacharla Chaitanya Krishna; Prince Chawla; Magdalena Dyduch-Siemińska; Joanna Klepacka; Ravinder Kaushik
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-12-17       Impact factor: 5.923

2.  Adsorption of Quercetin on Brown Rice and Almond Protein Matrices: Effect of Quercetin Concentration.

Authors:  Mirela Kopjar; Ivana Buljeta; Ina Ćorković; Anita Pichler; Josip Šimunović
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2022-03-09
  2 in total

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