| Literature DB >> 35893967 |
Gopika Jayaprakash1, Aarti Bains2, Prince Chawla1, Melinda Fogarasi3, Szabolcs Fogarasi4,5.
Abstract
Rice, Oryza sativa, is the major staple food that provides a larger share of dietary energy for more of the population than other cereal crops. Moreover, rice has a significant amount of protein including four different fractions such as prolamin, glutelin, globulin, and albumin with different solubility characteristics. However, these proteins exhibit a higher amino acid profile, so they are nutritionally important and possess several functional properties. Compared with many other cereal grains, rice protein is hypoallergic due to the absence of gluten, and therefore it is used to formulate food for infants and gluten-allergic people. Furthermore, the availability makes rice an easily accessible protein source and it exhibits several activities in the human body which discernibly affect total health. Because of these advantages, food industries are currently focusing on the effective application of rice protein as an alternative to animal-based and gluten-containing protein by overcoming limiting factors, such as poor solubility. Hence, it is important to gain an in-depth understanding of the rice protein to expand its application so, the underlined concept of this review is to give a current summary of rice protein, a detailed discussion of the chemistry of rice protein, and extraction techniques, and its functional properties. Furthermore, the impact of rice protein on human health and the current application of rice protein is also mentioned.Entities:
Keywords: amino acid; cytotoxicity; food applications; health benefits; physicochemical characteristics; rice protein
Year: 2022 PMID: 35893967 PMCID: PMC9370113 DOI: 10.3390/polym14153003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.967
Figure 1A simplified representation of the life cycle of rice protein from the rice plant to the human body.
Figure 2Schematic representation of ultrasonic-assisted alkali extraction of rice protein.
Figure 3Morphology and internal structure of rice kernel with grain endosperm protein fractions.
The essential and non-essential amino acids present in rice protein and composition in g/100 g.
| Amino Acids | Rice Protein (g/100 g) | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Essential amino acid | threonine | 2.09–5.06 | |
| Valine | 3.78–6.80 | ||
| Isoleucine | 2.69–5.18 | ||
| Leucine | 5.30–9.51 | ||
| Lysine | 2.2–6.24 | ||
| Histidine | 1.19–3.49 | [ | |
| Methionine | 0.65–3.49 | ||
| Cystine | 0.13–3.42 | ||
| Tyrosine | 1.33–6.0 | ||
| Phenylalanine | 3.5–6.30 | ||
| Methionine + cystine | 2.35–3.88 | ||
| Phenylalanine + tyrosine | 6.80–10.33 | ||
| Non-essential amino acid | Aspartic acid | 8.10–10.98 | |
| Serine | 2.96–5.64 | ||
| Glutamic acid | 13.36–22.42 | ||
| Glycine | 4.21–5.98 | [ | |
| Alanine | 3.69–6.20 | ||
| Arginine | 5.30–9.84 | ||
| proline | 2.70–14.88 |
Figure 4The symbolic presentation of emulsifying behavior of rice protein with the newly formed dispersed particle in the protein-mediated emulsion.