Publications by authors named "Karin Sebald"

Food texture, along with taste and odour, is an important factor in determining food flavour. However, the physiological properties of oral texture perception require greater examination and definition. Here we explore recent trends and perspectives related to mouthfeel and its relevance in food flavour perception, with an emphasis on the biophysical point of view and methods.

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About half of the world's population is infected with the bacterium Helicobacter pylori. For colonization, the bacterium neutralizes the low gastric pH and recruits immune cells to the stomach. The immune cells secrete cytokines, i.

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Eating satiating, protein-rich foods is one of the key aspects of modern diet, although a bitter off-taste often limits the application of some proteins and protein hydrolysates, especially in processed foods. Previous studies of our group demonstrated that bitter-tasting food constituents, such as caffeine, stimulate mechanisms of gastric acid secretion as a signal of gastric satiation and a key process of gastric protein digestion activation of bitter taste receptors (TAS2Rs). Here, we tried to elucidate whether dietary non-bitter-tasting casein is intra-gastrically degraded into bitter peptides that stimulate mechanisms of gastric acid secretion in physiologically achievable concentrations.

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During the last few years, key taste-active compounds have been isolated and identified by means of a combination of a time- and lab-consuming successive fractionation and sensory characterization. Because the peptidome of fermented, protein-rich food is very complex, new strategies are necessary to accelerate the identification of taste-active peptides. In this study, two advanced mass spectrometric approaches were developed to comprehensively map the bitter tasting peptidome of fermented foods by data-independent acquisition (DIA) using sequential window acquisition of all theoretical fragment ion-mass spectrometry (SWATH-MS) and an -assisted triple quadrupole (QQQ)-based targeted proteomics approach, separately.

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Aiming at the identification of the key bitter peptides in fermented foods, a new approach, coined "sensoproteomics", was developed and applied to fresh cheese samples differing in bitter taste intensity. By means of MPLC fractionation of the water-soluble cheese extracts in combination with taste dilution analysis, complex fractions with intense bitter taste were located and then screened by UPLC-MS/MS for the entire repertoire of ∼1600 candidate peptides, extracted from a literature meta-analysis on dairy products, by using a total of 120 selected reaction monitoring methods computed in silico. A total of 340 out of the 1600 peptides were found in the cheese samples, among which 17 peptides were identified as candidate bitter peptides by considering only peptides that were located in the bitter-tasting MPLC fractions (signal-to-noise ratio: ≥10) with a fold-change of ≥3 when comparing the less bitter to the more bitter cheese sample and that were validated by comparison with the synthetic reference peptides.

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This is the first application of fully automated, preparative, two-dimensional HPLC combined with sensory analysis for taste compound discovery using a sweet and licorice-like bitter-tasting aniseed extract as an example. Compared to the traditional iterative fractionation of food extracts by sensory-guided sequential application of separation techniques, the fully automated 2D-HPLC allowed the comprehensive separation of the aniseed extract into 256 subfractions and reduced the fractionation time from about 1 week to <1day. Using a smart sensory strategy to locate high-impact fractions, e.

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