| Literature DB >> 30724234 |
Gengjun Chen1, Laura Ehmke1, Chetan Sharma1, Rebecca Miller1, Pierre Faa2, Gordon Smith1, Yonghui Li3.
Abstract
Hard wheat flour doughs were prepared with five different levels of sodium chloride, and rheological properties were characterized. Zeta potential, disulfide-sulfhydryl groups, surface hydrophobicity, secondary structure, and extractable gliadin and glutenin of gluten were analyzed to elucidate gluten structure changes induced by salt. Addition of higher levels of salt (2.0 and 2.4%, fwb) in doughs resulted in larger storage and loss modulus, and elongational viscosity. Starch gelatinization temperatures increased with higher amounts of salt. The presence of salt decreased the free sulfhydryl content but increased the β-sheet structure of gluten. RP-HPLC indicated that salt enhanced the macromolecular aggregation of gluten proteins. The changes in gluten molecular conformation and network structure induced by salt significantly contributed to the improved physicochemical properties of dough. This study provides a better understanding of salt functionality in hard wheat flour dough and a valuable guide in searching for salt alternatives for bakery products.Entities:
Keywords: Dough; Gliadin; Gluten; Glutenin; HPLC; Hydrophobicity; Rheological properties; Secondary structure; Sodium chloride salt; Zeta potential
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30724234 DOI: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2018.07.157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Food Chem ISSN: 0308-8146 Impact factor: 7.514