Quantitative colorimetric assay for total protein applied to the red wine Pinot noir.

J Agric Food Chem

Department of Food Science and Technology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331-6602, USA.

Published: July 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • A new method for measuring protein in red wine uses a combination of protein precipitation and dye binding quantification, simplifying the process.
  • This technique involves minimal preparation and employs cold trichloroacetic acid/acetone for protein precipitation, which speeds up the overall process compared to existing methods.
  • The study tested 48 Pinot noir wines, revealing a protein content range from 50 to 102 mg/L, with an average of 70 mg/L, highlighting the importance of quantifying protein in routine wine analyses.

Article Abstract

A standard method for assaying protein in red wine is currently lacking. The method described here is based on protein precipitation followed by dye binding quantification. Improvements over existing approaches include minimal sample processing prior to protein precipitation with cold trichloroacetic acid/acetone and quantification based on absorbance relative to a commercially available standard representative of proteins likely to be found in wine, the yeast mannoprotein invertase. The precipitation method shortened preparation time relative to currently published methods and the mannoprotein standard yielded values comparable to those obtained by micro-Kjeldahl analysis. The assay was used to measure protein in 48 Pinot noir wines from 6 to 32 years old. The protein content of these wines was found to range from 50 to 102 mg/L with a mean value of 70 mg/L. The availability of a simple and relatively rapid procedure for assaying protein provides a practical tool to quantify a wine component that has been overlooked in routine analyses of red wines.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jf200547uDOI Listing

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