Open Access Article
Patrícia
Duque-Estrada‡
a,
Kate
Hardiman‡
a,
Astrid
Bøgebjerg Dam
b,
Nadia
Dodge
a,
Margit Dall
Aaslyng
b and
Iben Lykke
Petersen
*a
aDepartment of Food Science, Food Analytics and Biotechnology Section, University of Copenhagen, Rolighedsvej 26, 1958 Frederiksberg C, Denmark. E-mail: ilp@food.ku.dk
bUniversity College Absalon, Nutrition and Health, Centre for Nutrition, Rehabilitation and Midwifery, Sdr. Stationsvej 30, 4200 Slagelse, Denmark
First published on 25th July 2023
Plant proteins have low protein nutritional quality due to their unbalanced indispensable amino acid (IAA) profile and the presence of antinutritional factors (ANFs) that limit protein digestibility. The blending of pulses with cereals/pseudocereals can ensure a complete protein source of IAA. In addition, extrusion may be an effective way to reduce ANFs and improve protein digestibility. Thereby, we aimed to improve the protein nutritional quality of plant protein ingredients by blending different protein sources and applying extrusion processing. Protein blends were prepared with pea, faba bean, quinoa, hemp, and/or oat concentrates or flours, and extrudates were prepared either rich in pulses (texturized vegetable proteins, TVPs) or rich in cereals (referred to here as Snacks). After extrusion, all samples showed a reduction in trypsin inhibitor activity (TIA) greater than 71%. Extrusion caused an increase in the total in vitro protein digestibility (IVPD) of TVPs, whereas no significant effect was shown for the snacks. According to the molecular weight distribution, TVPs presented protein aggregation. The results suggest that the positive effect of decreased TIA on IVPD is partially counteracted by the formation of aggregates during extrusion which restricts enzyme accessibility. After extrusion, all snacks retained a balanced amino acid score whereas a small loss of methionine + cysteine was observed in the TVPs, resulting in a small reduction in IAA content. Thus, extrusion has the potential to improve the nutritional quality of TVPs by reducing TIA and increasing protein digestibility.
500 units per mg solids for the determination of trypsin inhibitors, pepsin from porcine gastric mucosa (≥250 units per mg solids) and pancreatin from porcine pancreas (4× USP specifications) for in vitro protein digestibility. All the other chemicals were also obtained from Sigma-Aldrich unless stated differently. Ultra-pure water (Milli-Q water system, Millipore Corporation, Merck) was used to prepare all the solutions unless stated differently.
Three TVPs and three Snacks containing different blends of plant protein ingredients were prepared by low moisture extrusion (LME, 7–8% moisture) in a twin screw extruder (Clextral A/S, France) at Organic Plant Protein A/S (Hedensted, DK) (pictures of the TVPs and Snacks can be seen in ESI 2†). The TVPs and Snacks composition was based on an original recipe used by the company, which here is referred to as TVP 1 and Snack 1. Therefore, the composition of the other TVPs and Snacks was based on improving the amino acid profile of TVP 1 and Snack 1. The weight percentage of each plant protein ingredient was based to guarantee the same protein content among the three TVPs and the three Snacks (Table 1). In the extruder, the barrel temperature ranged from 40–165 °C for TVPs and from 30–145 °C for Snacks. The screw speed ranged from 783–794 rpm, the water pump was set at 25.0 L h−1, and the flow rate ranged from 190–220 kg h−1. Before analysis, TVP and Snack extrudates were ground to flour using a coffee grinder (Braun type 4047, Mexico) for 10 seconds. To compare samples before and after extrusion, a raw mixture (RM) of the protein ingredients was prepared by blending the equivalent protein ingredient composition for each extrudate. The RMs were hand shaken for 5 minutes to allow a homogeneous mixture. All samples were stored in closed packages and stored at room temperature until analyses.
| Extrudates | Composition |
|---|---|
| The percentage of ingredients represents the weight percentage. The choice of the proportion of ingredients in each extrudate was based on the fact that TVPs and Snacks should have similar protein content, within the same group of the extrudate, and improved amino acid profile compared to TPV 1 and Snack 1. | |
| TVP 1 | 89% pea, 10% faba beans and 1% NaCl |
| TVP 2 | 49% faba beans, 40% pea, 10% quinoa and 1% NaCl |
| TVP 3 | 79% pea, 10% faba beans, 10% hemp and 1% NaCl |
| Snack 1 | 60% oat, 39% pea and 1% NaCl |
| Snack 2 | 50% quinoa, 39% pea, 10% oat and 1% NaCl |
| Snack 3 | 59% oat, 20% pea, 20% hemp and 1% NaCl |
000g and the supernatant was collected. The soluble protein concentration in the supernatant was measured at 280 nm using a nanodrop UV-Vis spectrophotometer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). Then, the following mixture was prepared: 25 μl 4× LDS sample buffer (lithium dodecyl sulfate, pH 8.4), 10 μl dithiothreitol (DTT, 1 M), and 65 μl of diluted sample to achieve a final protein concentration of 1 mg mL−1. For the non-reduced samples, DTT was replaced with ultra-pure water in the same volume. The sample mixtures were then heated for 10 minutes at 80 °C and 350 rpm in a thermomixer. Electrophoresis was carried out using Nupage 12% Bis-Tris gels (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA) and MOPS SDS running buffer (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA) in an XCell SureLock Mini-Cell Electrophoresis System (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). The wells were loaded with 10 μl of sample and 5 μl of pre-stained protein standard (Thermo Fisher Scientific, Waltham, MA). After running the gels, they were stained with 2% Coomassie Brilliant Blue and equilibration buffer (0.4 M ammonium sulfate, 0.2 M 86% phosphoric acid, 3.9 M 96% ethanol) in a ratio of 1
:
100 overnight on a rocking table (Polymax 1040, Heidolph, DE). The following day, the gels were washed in ultra-pure water and scanned using a gel scanner (Epson Perfection V850 Pro) and Phoretix TL120 software.
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The TIU per mg sample (as is) values were converted to dry matter basis by considering the moisture content of the samples. To allow comparison of samples with different protein contents, TIU per mg sample (dry basis) values were divided by the protein content (%). All samples were measured in three-independent replicates and each replicate was measured twice per assay.
:
50 (w/w) for pepsin digestion and 1
:
10 (w/w) for pancreatin digestion. Before digestion and after each stage (pepsin and pancreatin digestion), aliquots were withdrawn and diluted 1
:
10 v/v in sodium borate buffer (0.05 M, pH 10.0) to stop enzymatic hydrolysis. Samples were stored at 5 °C until further analyses. The IVPD (%) was determined by the quantification of free α-amino groups released during protein hydrolysis by the trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid (TNBS) colorimetric method using a microplate reader (Epoch 2, Biotek Instruments, Inc., Winooski, USA), described according to Joehnke et al. (2018).11 Shortly, alanine solution (0.2 mg mL−1DL-alanine in 0.05 M borate buffer, pH 10.0) was used for the calibration curve representing free α-amino groups and blanks only containing borate buffer (0.05 M, pH 10.0). Samples were diluted in a 2-fold series dilution with borate buffer (0.05 M, pH 10.0). In the final step, TNBS solution (0.1% 2,4,6-TNBS in H2O; picrylsulfonic acid solution) was added to all samples, calibration curve, and blank. The reaction with primary α-amino groups was detected continuously at 37 °C for 10 min at 450 nm. The absorbance curves were assessed using Gen5 v.3.11 Data Analysis Software (BioTek Instruments, VT) and fitted using a four-parameter logistic model. The concentration of α-amino groups was estimated from the alanine calibration curve. The IVPD (%) of all samples was determined as the ratio between the concentration of free α-amino groups and alanine internal standard which represented 100% protein digestibility, after correction with blanks (only containing enzymes) and undigested samples. To allow comparison of samples tested on different days, the total IVPD (%) was calculated relative to BSA, with BSA representing 100% digestibility. All samples were digested in independent triplicates.
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| g per 100 g | TVP 1 | TVP 2 | TVP 3 | Snack 1 | Snack 2 | Snack 3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The results are shown as mean ± standard deviation of duplicates. | ||||||
| Carbohydrate | 14.9 ± 0.78 | 14.6 ± 0.57 | 14.4 ± 0.21 | 45.5 ± 1.70 | 42.4 ± 0.71 | 41.0 ± 0.64 |
| Dietary fiber | 15.3 ± 0.57 | 14.3 ± 0.28 | 15.4 ± 0.35 | 12.4 ± 1.34 | 12.5 ± 0.42 | 13.8 ± 0.57 |
| Fat | 4.2 ± 0.07 | 5.0 ± 0.85 | 4.7 ± 0.21 | 5.8 ± 0.07 | 6.6 ± 0.42 | 6.7 ± 0.28 |
| Protein | 51.2 ± 0.50 | 52.3 ± 0.28 | 51.6 ± 0.21 | 27.7 ± 0.35 | 28.9 ± 0.35 | 27.7 ± 0.14 |
| Ash | 6.0 ± 0.01 | 6.0 ± 0.04 | 6.3 ± 0.07 | 4.1 ± 0.01 | 4.9 ± 0.03 | 4.7 ± 0.04 |
| Moisture | 8.8 ± 0.06 | 7.7 ± 0.21 | 7.9 ± 0.05 | 4.6 ± 0.01 | 4.8 ± 0.42 | 6.2 ± 0.3 |
In Fig. 1C and D the molecular weight distribution of RMs and Snacks extrudates are displayed. Similar to the TVPs, the pea proteins convicilin and vicilin were identified in the Snacks at the same molecular weight. At the molecular level between 50 and 60 kDa for Snacks 1 and 2, the band could represent the oat globulin or the pea legumin, and in Snack 3 the band could represent the edestin from hemp protein. As all samples consist of a blend of proteins it is challenging to identify which protein is the most representative in the band. However, under reducing conditions bands between 40 and 30 kDa and between 30 and 20 kDa can be seen (Fig. 1D), which are in line with the molecular weight of the legumin subunits (β and α) from peas and the β-globulin (30–35 kDa) and α-globulin (20–25 kDa) subunits from oats, indicating that probably both proteins are present in the samples.16 There is an indication that the hemp protein edestin was present in Snack 3 before (RM) and after extrusion at the same molecular weight as legumin, as can be seen in the gels of the protein ingredients (ESI 3†). Under non-reducing conditions (Fig. 1C), the band that indicates either legumins or oat globulins is only visible in the RMs. The disappearance of this band after extrusion under non-reducing conditions suggests that these proteins were insoluble and could not penetrate the gel. Probably, these proteins were aggregated and stabilized by disulfide bonds which were disrupted under reducing conditions, as we can see in the appearance of the subunits in the reduced gel (Fig. 1D). Usually, legumins have a higher content of cysteine than vicilins which explains the formation of disulfide bonds within its subunits.17
Overall, the results from the SDS-PAGE indicated that extrusion processing could have resulted in the formation of large protein aggregates. The formation of protein aggregates can hamper the accessibility of digestive enzymes, resulting in lower protein digestibility18 which will be discussed further on the in vitro protein digestibility results.
Proteins are stained using fast green FCF and appear more abundant in all TVP samples, as would be expected. The extrusion process changed all samples drastically and creates a matrix in both TVPs and Snacks. It has been shown that pea protein-based TVPs form a low-density, sponge-like protein matrix with a greater number of air cells (visible as black in the confocal images, Fig. 2) which is also visible in TVPs 1 + 2.21 Snacks 1 and 3, which contain a majority of oat, show less uniform protein distribution, with fewer and smaller air cells in the protein matrix. This correlates with a previous study that demonstrates the heterogeneity of protein aggregates in extruded oat.20 This could be due to swelling and gelatinization of high concentrations of carbohydrates present in Snack mixtures.
| Protein ingredients/extrudates | TIU per mg sample (dry basis) | TIU per mg protein | TIU reductiona (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| The results are shown as mean ± standard deviation of three independent replicates. Values within the same column with different letter superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05).a Reduction (%) indicates the decrease in TIU per mg sample (dry basis) after extrusion. <DL = below-known detection limits. NA: not applicable. RM: raw mixtures. | |||
| Pea protein | 7.59 ± 0.16b | 15.72 ± 0.33b | NA |
| Faba bean protein | 10.94 ± 0.26a | 19.23 ± 0.46a | NA |
| Hemp protein | 5.32 ± 0.12c | 10.64 ± 0.23e | NA |
| Quinoa flour | 0.61 ± 0.11g | 5.47 ± 0.97f | NA |
| Oat flour | <DL | <DL | NA |
| TVP 1 RM | 7.35 ± 0.23b | 15.11 ± 0.47bc | |
| TVP 1 | 1.93 ± 0.13e | 3.78 ± 0.26g | 74 |
| TVP 2 RM | 7.89 ± 0.04b | 16.33 ± 0.09b | |
| TVP 2 | 1.76 ± 0.25e | 3.37 ± 0.48g | 78 |
| TVP 3 RM | 7.39 ± 0.15b | 15.15 ± 0.30bc | |
| TVP 3 | 1.56 ± 0.11e | 3.03 ± 0.21g | 79 |
| Snack 1 RM | 3.57 ± 0.06d | 14.05 ± 0.23cd | |
| Snack 1 | 0.94 ± 0.09f | 3.40 ± 0.31g | 74 |
| Snack 2 RM | 3.34 ± 0.06d | 13.11 ± 0.22d | |
| Snack 2 | 0.99 ± 0.03f | 3.42 ± 0.11g | 71 |
| Snack 3 RM | 3.54 ± 0.06d | 13.57 ± 0.22d | |
| Snack 3 | 1.02 ± 0.04f | 3.68 ± 0.16g | 71 |
Regarding the protein ingredients, faba bean protein showed the significantly highest level of TIA (19.23 ± 0.46 TIU per mg protein), followed by pea protein (15.72 ± 0.33 TIU per mg protein), whereas quinoa and oat had the lowest TIA among all protein ingredients. The TIA level in oat proteins was below the detection range of the method.9 The discrepant difference in TIA levels observed in the protein ingredients was expected since pulses are known to have higher TIA than cereals.24
Comparing our results with the literature is a difficult task because there is great variability in the TIA levels reported for protein ingredients. This is explained by the varying methods and conditions used, such as enzyme activity, and the units used to express TIA in tested samples.25 For this reason, here we only compare our results based on TIU per mg of sample (dry basis) or mg of proteins. The results of faba bean and pea protein observed here were higher than those reported in the literature with values ranging from 2.31 to 7.20 TIU per mg protein for faba bean and 0.78 to 6.32 TIU per mg protein for field pea.22
Extrusion is a high-temperature short-time process that involves heating and shearing, resulting in a texturized final product. This process has been described to reduce or inactivate the protease inhibitor activities depending on the process conditions applied, such as moisture content of the feed, barrel temperature, and screw speed.24 The reduction of protease inhibitors during extrusion can be explained by the application of temperature and high shear forces that can physically deform the proteins, resulting in denaturation of the trypsin inhibitors by modification of the protein structure.26
For both TVPs and Snacks, the TIU per mg protein was significantly lower after extrusion compared to the RMs. A reduction in TIA of 71–79% was shown for all samples. Higher levels of TIA reduction in peas have been reported such as a 90% reduction after extrusion at 129 °C and total inactivation at 135 and 142 °C.27 However, the authors found much lower initial TIA in the raw pea (1.84 ± 0.15 TIU per mg dry basis). Many variables can contribute to different starting levels of TIA in the raw seeds, such as detection methods, cultivars, and agronomic conditions (e.g., climate and soil).28 In this study, the remaining trypsin inhibitors that could not be inactivated must be thermostable since it was not possible to completely inactivate trypsin inhibitors, even though the extrusion processing reached temperatures above 130 °C. Frias et al. (2011)27 showed that at 135 °C and 142 °C trypsin inhibitors were inactivated in pea extrudates. The difference can be explained by extrusion parameters, in which inactivation of trypsin inhibitors can be reached at high temperatures or at increased residence time at low temperatures.29 Hejdysz et al. (2022)30 also described a reduction in TIA after the extrusion of faba beans compared to the raw beans but did not find any additional reduction in trypsin inhibitor at temperatures above 110 °C, suggesting that the remaining trypsin inhibitor were more thermostable. The thermostability of trypsin inhibitors can be explained by the difference in the protein structure of the two types of trypsin inhibitors: Kunitz type which contains 2 disulfide bonds and the Bowman–Birk type which contains 7 disulfide bonds. The presence of these bonds is known to maintain the structural stability of the protein.
Comparing TVPs 1–3 and Snacks 1–3 no significant difference was observed in the TIA levels among the three TVPs and the three Snacks, despite the difference in their ingredients. However, Snacks had a lower TIA level than the TVPs, which goes in line with the fact that TVPs had more than 79% of pulses in their composition. As can be seen in Table 3, the legume ingredients had higher TIA than the cereals and pseudocereals.
Therefore, the extrusion process applied in this study as means to reduce trypsin inhibitors in the protein blends was accomplished. The inactivation of trypsin inhibitors is desirable as it is expected to increase the protein digestibility of the TVPs and Snacks, by allowing greater trypsin activity in the intestinal phase. A higher reduction in the TIA could be accomplished by changing extrusion parameters, combining pretreatment of the dry fractionated ingredients, such as heating or fermentation, or by cooking methods.7
| Extrudates | Pepsin digestibility (%) (1 h) | Pancreatin digestibility (%) (1 h) | Total digestibility (%) (2 h) |
|---|---|---|---|
| The results are shown as mean ± standard deviation of three independent replicates. Values within the same column with different letter superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05). BSA: bovine serum albumin. RM: raw mixtures. Composition: TVP 1 = 10% faba bean, 89% pea. TVP 2 = 49% faba bean, 40% pea, 10% quinoa. TVP 3 = 10% faba bean, 79% pea, 10% hemp. | |||
| TVP 1 RM | 4.17 ± 0.15bc | 13.41 ± 0.19d | 17.58 ± 0.32c |
| TVP 1 | 3.88 ± 0.06c | 17.07 ± 0.34ab | 20.94 ± 0.30b |
| TVP 2 RM | 4.54 ± 0.16b | 16.14 ± 0.78bc | 20.68 ± 0.90b |
| TVP 2 | 3.80 ± 0.18c | 17.64 ± 1.01ab | 21.44 ± 1.09b |
| TVP 3 RM | 3.91 ± 0.18c | 14.34 ± 1.34cd | 18.25 ± 1.51c |
| TVP 3 | 3.85 ± 0.22c | 18.67 ± 0.61a | 22.52 ± 0.58b |
| BSA reference | 6.44 ± 0.09a | 18.77 ± 0.19a | 25.21 ± 0.22a |
Only the TVP 2 showed a significant reduction in pepsin digestibility after extrusion compared to the RM. This could be explained by the formation of protein aggregates induced by extrusion which reduces the accessibility for digestive enzymes, as observed in the SDS-PAGE under reducing conditions (Fig. 1B). Regarding the intestinal phase, TVP 1 RM (13.41% ± 0.19) and TVP 3 RM (14.34% ± 1.34) showed the lowest pancreatin digestibility. However, a significant increase in digestibility was detected for the respective extrudates, TVP 1 (17.07% ± 0.34) and TVP 3 (18.67% ± 0.61). This is likely caused by the reduction in trypsin inhibitor activity after extrusion, 74% and 79% respectively (Table 3), allowing greater protein digestion in the intestinal phase. Therefore, the significant increase in the total digestibility of TVP 1 (19% increase) and TVP 3 (23% increase) compared to the RMs can be attributed to the reduction in trypsin inhibitors. This trend agrees with the results of Qi et al. (2021)31 who found an increase of 12% in the protein digestibility of pea extrudates processed at 90 °C compared to the raw pea flour. The higher % increase observed in our study can be attributed to a difference in the level of trypsin inhibitor in the flour, and the extrusion conditions, since we used a higher extrusion temperature. However, no significant difference was observed for TVP 2 before and after extrusion, probably related to the presence of protein aggregates offsetting the positive effect of lower trypsin inhibitor activity.
The extrusion process can result in protein aggregation depending on the temperature applied which can limit the digestive enzyme accessibility, thereby reducing protein digestibility.32 Our results suggest a positive effect of the extrusion processing method on the nutritional quality of TVPs, regarding protein digestibility. However, compared to highly digestible animal protein, BSA reference, all TVPs still showed a lower total protein digestibility. This result was expected since extrusion can improve the digestibility of proteins by protein denaturation and a reduction in enzyme inhibitors, but the extent of the improvement depends on the food matrix and the type of proteins under consideration, as well as extrusion conditions.33
The IVPD results of the Snacks are outlined in Table 5. For all the Snacks, pepsin digestibility was significantly reduced after extrusion. As described earlier, this reduction in protein digestibility can be attributed to the formation of protein aggregates which are less accessible to protease enzymes34 (Fig. 1D). Moreover, the presence of fiber and starch in the Snacks, due to their higher content in cereals/pseudocereals, combined with the protein structural changes induced by extrusion may have played a role in the low protein digestibility observed. Opazo-Navarrete et al. (2019)35 showed that the incorporation of starch into quinoa protein isolates heated at 120 °C resulted in a larger decrease in the protein digestibility in the gastric phase after 180 min than in the protein isolate combined with starch and fiber, and in the heated dry fractionated quinoa concentrate. The authors explained that heating the mixture of protein isolate containing partially denatured protein, due to the wet fractionation process, and starch resulted in extensive protein aggregation and starch gelatinization which hinders the penetration of pepsin into the matrix and enzyme accessibility to proteins, resulting in very low protein digestibility. Moreover, it has been shown that the presence of amylose and/or amylopectin can affect protein digestibility positively or negatively. Chen et al. (2021)36 showed that adding amylopectin to pea protein high-moisture extrudates decreased the in vitro protein digestibility compared to pea protein extrudate. On the contrary, adding amylose to amylopectin at different ratios improved the protein digestibility compared to amylopectin alone. The authors suggested that amylopectin could result in protein aggregation, therefore, limiting protein digestibility.
| Extrudates | Pepsin digestibility (%) (1 h) | Pancreatin digestibility (%) (1 h) | Total digestibility (%) (2 h) |
|---|---|---|---|
| The results are shown as mean ± standard deviation of three independent replicates. Values within the same column with different letter superscripts are significantly different (p < 0.05). BSA: bovine serum albumin. RM: raw mixtures. Composition: Snack 1 = 39% pea, 60% oat. Snack 2 = 39% pea, 50% quinoa, 10% oat. Snack 3 = 20% pea, 20% hemp, 59% oat. | |||
| Snack 1 RM | 3.66 ± 0.09b | 13.58 ± 0.33bc | 17.24 ± 0.40b |
| Snack 1 | 2.55 ± 0.08c | 15.63 ± 1.10b | 18.19 ± 1.05b |
| Snack 2 RM | 4.02 ± 0.35b | 14.92 ± 0.44b | 18.94 ± 0.18b |
| Snack 2 | 2.40 ± 0.04c | 15.14 ± 0.69b | 17.54 ± 0.70b |
| Snack 3 RM | 2.77 ± 0.04c | 10.64 ± 0.50d | 13.41 ± 0.47c |
| Snack 3 | 1.56 ± 0.36d | 12.36 ± 1.31cd | 13.93 ± 1.67c |
| BSA reference | 6.79 ± 0.09a | 20.50 ± 0.19a | 27.28 ± 0.17a |
Regarding pancreatin digestibility, it seemed that protein digestibility increased after extrusion, however, the increase was not significant. Even though there was a significant reduction in the TIA after extrusion, the initial TIA in the RMs was already low. Thereby, the impact of TIA reduction in the protein digestibility of Snacks during the intestinal phase was not the same as seen for the TVPs. Likewise, Carbonaro et al. (2000)37 also showed that thermal treatment only had a slightly positive effect on the digestibility of common bean proteins. The thermal inactivation of the high amount of ANFs present in the beans was counterbalanced by the negative effect of heating on protein digestibility. However, we must consider that different raw materials, with different protein compositions and TIA levels, will result in different protein digestibility.
When comparing the IVPD of all TVPs and Snacks to the BSA reference, BSA had a higher protein digestibility compared to all samples (Tables 4 and 5). This result was expected as BSA is a highly digestible protein.38 To allow comparison of all TVPs and Snacks, the total IVPD was calculated relative to the protein digestibility of BSA as illustrated in Fig. 3. Overall, the snacks showed a lower IVPD compared to the TVPs. This can be attributed to the greater starch content in these samples which had higher carbohydrate content than the TVPs. In addition, the protein matrix in the Snacks (Fig. 2) was less uniformly distributed and less sponge-like as seen in the TVP extrudates, which may have contributed to hindering the penetration of the digestive enzymes and their accessibility to the proteins. The protein and starch matrix can reduce the accessibility of digestive enzymes to peptide bonds and thereby reducing protein digestibility.35,39
Overall, the extrusion process did not seem to improve the total protein digestibility of Snacks, as the IVPD of the RM and extrudates did not differ significantly. Interestingly, Snack 3 before and after extrusion showed a significantly lower total protein digestibility compared to all other snacks. This might indicate an effect of the food matrix composition on protein digestibility since the hemp protein had the highest fiber content among all protein ingredients (ESI 1†). The presence of intact cell walls (i.e. dietary fiber) in whole beans/seeds, protein flours, and less processed protein ingredients can restrict the contact between proteins and digestive enzymes and enzyme mobility, therefore reducing the digestibility and absorption of proteins.40 Generally, the food matrix composition (i.e. the presence of starch, fiber, and ANFs) has been associated with a negative or no effect on in vitro protein digestibiliy.41 Studies have shown that the presence of soluble or insoluble dietary fiber decreased in vitro protein digestibility of plant protein sources.35,42,43
The amino acid content and score of the TVPs before and after extrusion are shown in Table 6. The results of the theoretical calculation for the RM showed that among the TVPs, TVP 3 was the only extrudate with an amino acid score greater than 100 before extrusion. This proves that the higher content of pea protein in the RM of TVP 3 contributed to obtaining a balanced amino acid composition (for the amino acid content and score of pea protein see Table 2 in ESI 4†). Meanwhile, the higher content of faba bean protein in the RM of TVP 2 contributed to the lower amino acid score compared to the other RMs of TVPs. The sulfur-containing amino acids appeared to be the limiting amino acids for all TVPs. This result was expected since all TVPs were mainly comprised of pea and faba proteins which have a lower methionine and cysteine content compared to the cereals and pseudocereals. After the extrusion process, a reduction in the amino acid score was observed for all TVPs. However, TVP 3 was found to have the largest reduction in the amino acid score (from 106 to 95) despite the complete amino acid profile before extrusion.
| TVP 1 RM | TVP 1 | TVP 2 RM | TVP 2 | TVP 3 RM | TVP 3 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indispensable amino acid | Amino acid contenta | Amino acid scorea | Amino acid contentb | Amino acid scoreb | Amino acid contenta | Amino acid scorea | Amino acid contentb | Amino acid scoreb | Amino acid contenta | Amino acid scorea | Amino acid contentb | Amino acid scoreb |
| (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | |
| a Theoretical amino acid content based on the composition of the individual raw mixtures (ESI 4†). b Actual amino acid content. RM: raw mixture. Composition: TVP 1: 89% pea and 10% faba beans; TVP 2: 49% faba beans, 40% pea and 10% quinoa; TVP 3: 79% pea, 10% faba beans, 10% hemp. | ||||||||||||
| Histidine | 25.86 | 171 | 25.21 | 166 | 26.89 | 177 | 26.68 | 176 | 26.03 | 172 | 26.84 | 177 |
| Isoleucine | 43.15 | 142 | 44.27 | 146 | 43.19 | 143 | 44.86 | 148 | 42.86 | 141 | 44.59 | 147 |
| Leucine | 76.84 | 130 | 81.13 | 137 | 79.73 | 135 | 77.87 | 132 | 75.97 | 129 | 79.69 | 135 |
| Lysine | 79.49 | 175 | 76.68 | 169 | 73.32 | 161 | 72.92 | 160 | 75.63 | 166 | 73.49 | 162 |
| Methionine | 9.50 | 9.32 | 8.85 | 8.70 | 10.94 | 9.70 | ||||||
| Cysteine | 12.69 | 11.86 | 12.36 | 11.86 | 13.11 | 11.97 | ||||||
| Methionine + cysteine | 22.19 | 98 | 21.18 | 93 | 21.20 | 93 | 20.55 | 90 | 24.06 | 106 | 21.68 | 95 |
| Phenylalanine | 51.64 | 48.62 | 48.15 | 48.62 | 51.12 | 49.34 | ||||||
| Tyrosine | 37.00 | 35.57 | 36.84 | 35.57 | 36.89 | 35.92 | ||||||
| Phenylalanine + tyrosine | 88.65 | 234 | 84.19 | 222 | 84.99 | 224 | 84.19 | 222 | 88.02 | 232 | 85.26 | 225 |
| Threonine | 39.38 | 173 | 36.96 | 163 | 38.27 | 168 | 36.96 | 163 | 38.99 | 172 | 37.78 | 166 |
| Tryptophan | 8.95 | 148 | 8.70 | 143 | 9.06 | 149 | 8.70 | 143 | 9.20 | 152 | 9.50 | 157 |
| Valine | 46.39 | 118 | 48.02 | 122 | 46.48 | 118 | 48.02 | 122 | 46.56 | 118 | 47.07 | 119 |
The amino acid content and score of the Snacks are outlined in Table 7. Before extrusion, all Snacks had an amino acid score greater than 100, which shows that the complementation of pulses, cereals, and pseudocereals resulted in a complete protein source. Unlike the TVPs, the Snacks did not show a lower amino acid score compared to their RMs. Surprisingly, all Snacks retained an amino acid score greater than 100 after the extrusion process. These results showed that using a higher content of cereals/pseudocereals in the protein blends outcomes in a sufficient level of IAAs. This may be due to the inclusion of higher content of oats, quinoa, and hemp in the Snacks providing more sulfur-containing amino acids since those were not the limiting ones in these protein sources (ESI 4†). Interestingly, Snack 3 showed a higher content of sulfur-containing amino acids and lower lysine content compared to the other two Snacks. This is likely attributed to its composition containing a higher content of oat (59%) and hemp (20%) and a lower content of peas (20%), compared to Snack 1 (60% oat and 39% pea) and Snack 2 (50% quinoa, 39% pea, and 10% oat), providing more methionine and cysteine and less lysine due to the latter being the limiting amino acid in oat and hemp. The potential of blending plant proteins is well described in literature since cereal-based proteins that score low in lysine but high in methionine and cysteine to a certain extent can complement proteins obtained from pulses, which are high in lysine but low in sulfur-containing amino acids.44 Moreover, the degree of complementarity will depend on the ratio of combined protein sources.45
| Snack 1 RM | Snack 1 | Snack 2 RM | Snack 2 | Snack 3 RM | Snack 3 | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indispensable amino acid | Amino acid contenta | Amino acid scorea | Amino acid contentb | Amino acid scoreb | Amino acid contenta | Amino acid scorea | Amino acid contentb | Amino acid scoreb | Amino acid contenta | Amino acid scorea | Amino acid contentb | Amino acid scoreb |
| (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | (mg per g protein) | |
| a Theoretical amino acid content based on the composition of the individual raw mixtures (ESI 4†). b Actual amino acid content. RM: raw mixture. Composition: Snack 1: 60% oat and 39% pea; Snack 2: 50% quinoa, 39% pea and 10% oat; Snack 3: 59% oat, 20% pea, 20% hemp. | ||||||||||||
| Histidine | 24.86 | 164 | 24.63 | 163 | 26.73 | 176 | 26.91 | 178 | 25.51 | 168 | 25.83 | 170 |
| Isoleucine | 42.21 | 139 | 44.12 | 146 | 42.51 | 140 | 44.00 | 145 | 41.10 | 136 | 42.68 | 141 |
| Leucine | 76.33 | 129 | 75.74 | 128 | 75.21 | 127 | 76.00 | 129 | 72.91 | 123 | 75.63 | 128 |
| Lysine | 71.30 | 157 | 71.32 | 157 | 75.84 | 167 | 73.82 | 162 | 56.28 | 124 | 59.53 | 131 |
| Methionine | 11.79 | 11.76 | 13.59 | 13.45 | 17.42 | 16.47 | ||||||
| Cysteine | 17.60 | 17.28 | 15.25 | 14.91 | 19.27 | 18.35 | ||||||
| Methionine + cysteine | 29.38 | 129 | 29.04 | 128 | 28.85 | 127 | 28.36 | 125 | 36.69 | 161 | 34.82 | 153 |
| Phenylalanine | 52.28 | 51.84 | 50.81 | 51.64 | 50.28 | 50.54 | ||||||
| Tyrosine | 36.70 | 34.56 | 36.17 | 34.91 | 36.27 | 34.07 | ||||||
| Phenylalanine + tyrosine | 88.98 | 235 | 86.40 | 228 | 86.98 | 230 | 86.55 | 228 | 86.54 | 228 | 84.61 | 223 |
| Threonine | 38.44 | 169 | 37.50 | 165 | 39.60 | 174 | 37.45 | 165 | 36.91 | 162 | 36.32 | 160 |
| Tryptophan | 10.47 | 173 | 10.29 | 170 | 10.40 | 172 | 10.18 | 168 | 11.47 | 189 | 11.61 | 192 |
| Valine | 47.71 | 121 | 50.00 | 127 | 47.10 | 120 | 50.18 | 127 | 48.37 | 123 | 50.17 | 127 |
Fig. 4 illustrates the percentage of reduction in IAAs after the extrusion of the TVPs and Snacks. The results highlight that not all IAAs are lost during the extrusion process and that the loss of certain IAAs seems to depend on the extrudate composition and extrusion process. In TVP 1, TVP 3, and Snack 3 (Fig. 4A, C, and F), there was a greater loss in sulfur-containing amino acids compared to the other extrudates. In addition, in Snack 1 and Snack 3 (Fig. 4D, F) we noticed a slightly more pronounced decrease in tyrosine than in the other extrudates. However, the loss of these IAAs should not be a matter of concern, especially for the Snacks that maintained an amino acid score above 100 after extrusion. Frias et al. (2011) also found a decrease in the sulfur-containing amino acids after extrusion and that the amino acid score varied according to the extrusion temperature, from 80 in raw peas to 73 and 69 after extrusion at 135 °C and 142 °C, respectively.27 The loss of amino acids after extrusion can be explained by oxidation reactions such as the Maillard reaction or protein oxidation.45 Among all IAAs, lysine is the most sensitive to Maillard reaction under high temperatures and low feed moisture extrusion.45 Free sugars can be provided from the hydrolysis of starch during extrusion to react with lysine and other amino acids.45 Yet, since the reduction of methionine and cysteine is much greater than that of lysine, it rather suggests the oxidation of these amino acids during the extrusion process. In proteins, all amino acid residues are prone to be oxidized by different reactive oxygen species (ROS), especially methionine and cysteine residues due to their increased sensibility to ROS.46 Methionine is oxidized to methionine sulfoxide during food processing and to a less extent to methionine sulfone, only under rigorous oxidation conditions.47 Cysteine can also be oxidized into various products, such as disulfide, sulfenic acid, sulfonic acid, and sulfinic acid.48 The bioavailability of these oxidized forms of both methionine and cysteine depends on their degree of oxidation. Methionine sulfone and cysteic acid are not bioavailable, but methionine sulfoxide can be utilized to some degree.49 This highlights that oxidation occurring during extrusion can potentially affect the protein's nutritional quality due to the loss of IAAs.
Footnotes |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d2fo03912e |
| ‡ Both authors contributed equally to the paper. |
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |