September
2006
Volume
83
Number
5
Pages
472
—
477
Authors
Yuka
Miyamoto
1
,
2
and
Kimio
Nishimura
1
,
3
Affiliations
Department of Food Science and Nutrition, Doshisha Women's College of Liberal Arts, Kamigyo-ku, Kyoto, 602-0893, Japan.
Present address: Department of Home Economics, Shukugawa Gakuin College, 6-58 Koshikiiwa-cho Nishinomiya, 662-8555, Japan.
Corresponding author. Phone: +81-75-251-4214. Fax: +81-75-251-4289 or 4214. E-mail: knishimu@dwc.doshisha.ac.jp
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RelatedArticle
Accepted April 10, 2006.
Abstract
ABSTRACT
In the current study, we examined the role of superoxide anion radical (O-2) in the improvement of bread dough by L-ascorbic acid. Because of difficulties in detecting thiyl radicals in the presence of L-ascorbic acid, we replaced the latter with riboflavin, which produces O-2 upon photoactivation. Nitro blue tetrazolium dye confirmed that O-2 was produced in dough upon photoactivation of riboflavin. Electron spin resonance spectroscopy coupled with spin trapping showed that, in a solution containing riboflavin and the hydrolyzed gluten peptide (GP-1), thiyl radicals are produced upon photoactivation. Addition of superoxide dismutase but not catalase suppressed the production of thiyl radicals on GP-1. These results suggest that the O-2 produced during the oxidation of L-ascorbic acid in dough generates thiyl radicals on gluten proteins. This, in turn, would increase the production of interprotein disulfide bonds and result in an improvement in bread structure.
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© 2006 AACC International, Inc.