2018
Miralles, Beatriz; Barrio, Roberto; Cueva, Carolina; Recio, Isidra; Amigo, Lourdes
Dynamic gastric digestion of a commercial whey protein concentrate† Artículo de revista
En: Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, vol. 98, no 5, pp. 1873-1879, 2018.
Resumen | Enlaces | BibTeX | Etiquetas: dynamic gastric digestion model, INFOGEST static digestion protocol, peptides, simgi®, Tandem mass spectrometry, whey proteins
@article{https://doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.8668,
title = {Dynamic gastric digestion of a commercial whey protein concentrate†},
author = {Beatriz Miralles and Roberto Barrio and Carolina Cueva and Isidra Recio and Lourdes Amigo},
url = {https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/jsfa.8668},
doi = {https://doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.8668},
year = {2018},
date = {2018-01-01},
journal = {Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture},
volume = {98},
number = {5},
pages = {1873-1879},
abstract = {Abstract BACKGROUND A dynamic gastrointestinal simulator, simgi®, has been applied to assess the gastric digestion of a whey protein concentrate. Samples collected from the outlet of the stomach have been compared to those resulting from the static digestion protocol INFOGEST developed on the basis of physiologically inferred conditions. RESULTS Progress of digestion was followed by SDS-PAGE and LC–MS/MS. By SDS-PAGE, serum albumin and α-lactalbumin were no longer detectable at 30 and 60 min, respectively. On the contrary, β-lactoglobulin was visible up to 120 min, although in decreasing concentrations in the dynamic model due to the gastric emptying and the addition of gastric fluids. Moreover, β-lactoglobulin was partly hydrolysed by pepsin probably due to the presence of heat-denatured forms and the peptides released using both digestion models were similar. Under dynamic conditions, a stepwise increase in number of peptides over time was observed, while the static protocol generated a high number of peptides from the beginning of digestion. CONCLUSION Whey protein digestion products using a dynamic stomach are consistent with those generated with the static protocol but the kinetic behaviour of the peptide profile emphasises the effect of the sequential pepsin addition, peristaltic shaking, and gastric emptying on protein digestibility. © 2017 Society of Chemical Industry},
keywords = {dynamic gastric digestion model, INFOGEST static digestion protocol, peptides, simgi®, Tandem mass spectrometry, whey proteins},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
Abstract BACKGROUND A dynamic gastrointestinal simulator, simgi®, has been applied to assess the gastric digestion of a whey protein concentrate. Samples collected from the outlet of the stomach have been compared to those resulting from the static digestion protocol INFOGEST developed on the basis of physiologically inferred conditions. RESULTS Progress of digestion was followed by SDS-PAGE and LC–MS/MS. By SDS-PAGE, serum albumin and α-lactalbumin were no longer detectable at 30 and 60 min, respectively. On the contrary, β-lactoglobulin was visible up to 120 min, although in decreasing concentrations in the dynamic model due to the gastric emptying and the addition of gastric fluids. Moreover, β-lactoglobulin was partly hydrolysed by pepsin probably due to the presence of heat-denatured forms and the peptides released using both digestion models were similar. Under dynamic conditions, a stepwise increase in number of peptides over time was observed, while the static protocol generated a high number of peptides from the beginning of digestion. CONCLUSION Whey protein digestion products using a dynamic stomach are consistent with those generated with the static protocol but the kinetic behaviour of the peptide profile emphasises the effect of the sequential pepsin addition, peristaltic shaking, and gastric emptying on protein digestibility. © 2017 Society of Chemical Industry