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Effects of Laccase and Ferulic Acid on Wheat Flour Doughs1

November 2000 Volume 77 Number 6
Pages 823 — 828
E. Labat , 2 M. H. Morel , 2 and X. Rouau 2 , 3

Presented in part at the AACC 84th Annual Meeting, Seattle, WA, November 1999. Unité de Technologie des Céréales et des Agropolymères, ENSAM/INRA, 2 Place Viala, 34060 Montpellier Cedex 01, France. Corresponding author. E-mail: rouau@ensam.inra.fr


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Accepted August 7, 2000.
ABSTRACT

The effects of a laccase from the fungus Pycnoporus cinnabarinus on the mixing of a wheat flour dough with or without added ferulic acid (FA) were studied. Laccase reduced dough time-to-peak and accelerated dough breakdown in comparison with the control. Its effect was enhanced with FA. The water extractability of arabinoxylans (AX) increased during mixing of a dough free of added laccase, especially with exogenous FA. At the same time, the extractability of FA decreased during mixing. Added FA may have competed with endogenous AX feruloyl esters, inhibiting partly oxidative gelation. Laccase decreased AX extractability by chain cross-linking through oxidative dimerization of feruloyl esters. FA and, moreover, FA plus laccase, increased the oxidation of sulfhydryl (SH) groups. FA and, even more, FA in combination with laccase, increased the rate of protein depolymerization during mixing. FA and the products of FA laccase oxidation participated in a redox reaction involving SH groups. A coupling reaction involving enzymatically generated feruloyl radicals and thiol radicals generated through the mechanical breakdown of inter-chain disulfide bonds might explain these results.



© 2000 American Association of Cereal Chemists, Inc.