Literature DB >> 33941996

The impact of replacing wheat flour with cellular legume powder on starch bioaccessibility, glycaemic response and bread roll quality: A double-blind randomised controlled trial in healthy participants.

Balazs H Bajka1, Ana M Pinto1, Jennifer Ahn-Jarvis2, Peter Ryden2, Natalia Perez-Moral2, Alice van der Schoot1, Costanza Stocchi1, Catherine Bland1, Sarah E Berry3, Peter R Ellis1, Cathrina H Edwards2.   

Abstract

The global rise in obesity and type 2 diabetes has generated significant interest in regulating the glycaemic impact of staple foods. Wheat breads (white or wholemeal) are popular staples, but have a high-glycaemic index, due to the highly digestible wheat starch. Reducing the glycaemic potency of white bread is challenging because the bread-making conditions are mostly conducive to starch gelatinisation. Cellular legume powders are a new source of type 1 resistant starch, where the starch is encapsulated by dietary fibre in the form of intact plant cell walls. The starch in these cell powders is less susceptible to gelatinisation and digestion than starch in conventional legume flours. However, legume cell resilience to baking conditions and the effects of this ingredient on glycaemic responses and product quality are unknown. Here we show that the integrity of cell wall fibre in chickpea powder was preserved on baking and this led to a ~40% reduction in in vivo glycaemic responses (iAUC120) to white bread rolls (~50 g available carbohydrate and 12 g wheat protein per serving) when 30% or 60% (w/w) of the wheat flour was replaced with intact cell powder. Significant reductions in glycaemic responses were achieved without adverse effects on bread texture, appearance or palatability. Starch digestibility analysis and microscopy confirmed the importance of cell integrity in attenuating glycaemic responses. Alternative processing methods that preserve cell integrity are a new, promising way to provide healthier low glycaemic staple foods; we anticipate that this will improve dietary options for diabetes care.
© 2020 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Bread; Continuous glucose monitoring; Glycaemic response; Legume; Plant cell; PulseON®; Type 1 resistant starch

Year:  2021        PMID: 33941996      PMCID: PMC7859705          DOI: 10.1016/j.foodhyd.2020.106565

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Food Hydrocoll        ISSN: 0268-005X            Impact factor:   9.147


  5 in total

1.  The Impact of Germinated Chickpea Flour Addition on Dough Rheology and Bread Quality.

Authors:  Denisa Atudorei; Olivia Atudorei; Georgiana Gabriela Codină
Journal:  Plants (Basel)       Date:  2022-04-30

2.  Effect of high-amylose starch branching enzyme II wheat mutants on starch digestibility in bread, product quality, postprandial satiety and glycaemic response.

Authors:  Marina Corrado; Jennifer H Ahn-Jarvis; Brendan Fahy; George M Savva; Cathrina H Edwards; Brittany A Hazard
Journal:  Food Funct       Date:  2022-02-07       Impact factor: 5.396

3.  Nutritional Composition and In Vitro Starch Digestibility of Crackers Supplemented with Faba Bean Whole Flour, Starch Concentrate, Protein Concentrate and Protein Isolate.

Authors:  Manu Pratap Gangola; Bharathi Raja Ramadoss; Sarita Jaiswal; Hrvoje Fabek; Mehmet Tulbek; Gerald Harvey Anderson; Ravindra N Chibbar
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2022-02-23

4.  Effects of Germinated Lentil Flour on Dough Rheological Behavior and Bread Quality.

Authors:  Denisa Atudorei; Silvia Mironeasa; Georgiana Gabriela Codină
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2022-09-23

5.  Utilizing Hydrothermal Processing to Align Structure and In Vitro Digestion Kinetics between Three Different Pulse Types.

Authors:  Katharina Pälchen; Ben Van den Wouwer; Dorine Duijsens; Marc E Hendrickx; Ann Van Loey; Tara Grauwet
Journal:  Foods       Date:  2022-01-12
  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.