In vitro degradation of wheat gluten fractions by Fusarium graminearum proteases

2011 | journal article

Jump to: Cite & Linked | Documents & Media | Details | Version history

Cite this publication

​In vitro degradation of wheat gluten fractions by Fusarium graminearum proteases​
Eggert, K. ; Rawel, H. M. & Pawelzik, E. ​ (2011) 
European Food Research and Technology233(4) pp. 697​-705​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00217-011-1566-x 

Documents & Media

217_2011_Article_1566.pdf2.15 MBAdobe PDF

License

Published Version

Special user license Goescholar License

Details

Authors
Eggert, Kai ; Rawel, Hashadrai M.; Pawelzik, Elke 
Abstract
Fusarium spp. infection of cereal grain is a common problem, which leads to a dramatic loss of grain quality. The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of Fusarium infection on the wheat storage protein gluten and its fractions, the gliadins and glutenins, in an in vitro model system. Gluten proteins were digested by F. graminearum proteases for 2, 4, 8 and 24 h, separated by Osborne fractionation and characterised by chromatographic (RP-HPLC) and electrophoretic analysis (SDS-Page). Gluten digestion by F. graminearum proteases showed in comparison with gliadins a preference for the glutenins whereas the HMW subfraction was at most affected. In comparison with a untreated control, the HMW subfraction was degraded of about 97% after 4 h incubation with Fusarium proteases. Separate digestion of gliadin and glutenin underlined the preference for HMW-GS. Analogue to the observed change in the gluten composition, the yield of the proteins extracted changed. A higher amount of glutenin fragments was found in the gliadin extraction solution after digestion and could mask a gliadin destruction at the same time. This observation can contribute to explain the frequently reported reduced glutenin amount parallel to an increase in gliadin quantity after Fusarium infection in grains.
Issue Date
2011
Journal
European Food Research and Technology 
Organization
Fakultät für Agrarwissenschaften ; Department für Nutzpflanzenwissenschaften ; Abteilung Qualität pflanzlicher Erzeugnisse 
Working Group
Aufgabengebiet Agrikulturchemie 
Language
English

Reference

Citations


Social Media