Impact of dry solids and bile acid concentrations on bile acid binding capacity of extruded oat cereals.

J Agric Food Chem

Department of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Iowa State University, Ames, Iowa 50011, USA.

Published: September 2008

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the bile acid (BA) binding efficiency of extruded breakfast cereals (EBC) made from two oat lines, N979 and Jim, focusing on their different beta-glucan levels (8.7% vs. 4.9%).
  • Results showed that the N979 EBC exhibited higher BA binding capacity at dry solids (DS) of 3% or greater and BA concentrations of 2.37 micromol/g or higher compared to Jim EBC, suggesting that beta-glucan's solubility and concentration influence BA binding efficiency.
  • Overall, the findings indicate that both the amount and solubility of beta-glucan are significant factors in BA binding, highlighting how conditions can be optimized to assess

Article Abstract

Extruded breakfast cereals (EBC), processed from two oat lines, N979-5-2-4 (N979) and "Jim", with beta-glucan concentrations of 8.7 and 4.9%, respectively, were used to determine the impact of dry solids (DS) and bile acid (BA) concentrations on in vitro BA binding efficiency. A full fractional factorial design with levels for BA concentrations of 0.20, 0.47, 0.95, 2.37, and 4.73 micromol/g of total EBC slurry and for DS in the slurries of 0.8, 2, 3, and 4% (w/w) was selected. The absolute amount of BA bound (micromol) was measured for each trial in the experiment design. The percentage (%) of BA bound based on the total amount of BA added and BA bound per gram of DS of the EBC (micromol/g) were also presented and discussed. N979 in vitro digestion slurries had greater BA binding (micromol) than Jim slurries at different DS and BA concentrations, with greater differences at DS of 3% or above and at BA concentrations of 2.37 micromol/g or above. No difference in the absolute amount of BA bound (micromol) and percentage (%) BA bound occurred between the EBC slurries made from the two oat types at the lowest DS of 0.8% or the lowest BA concentration of 0.20 micromol/g. The efficiency of BA binding by beta-glucan in these two EBC became more distinguishable at 3% DS or above and BA concentrations of 2.37 micromol/g or above, indicating that these two conditions can be employed to measure BA capacities for similar foods. Also, the beta-glucan in the EBC produced from the N979 oat line was more soluble than that from the EBC produced from the Jim oat line. Thus, greater BA binding capacity may have been caused by both a greater amount of beta-glucan and a greater solubility of beta-glucan in N979 than in Jim EBC.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf802284hDOI Listing

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