Background: Legumes are an excellent plant source of the limiting indispensable amino acid (IAA) lysine in vegetarian, cereal-based diets. However, their digestibility is poor largely because of their antiprotease content. Extrusion can enhance digestibility by inactivating trypsin inhibitors and thus potentially improve the protein quality of legumes.
Objective: We measured the digestibility of extruded chickpea and yellow pea protein with use of a dual stable isotope method in moderately stunted South Indian primary school children.
Methods: Twenty-eight moderately stunted children (height-for-age z scores <-2.0 SD and >-3.0 SD) aged 6-11 y from low to middle socioeconomic status were randomly assigned to receive a test protein (extruded intrinsically [2H]-labeled chickpea or yellow pea) along with a standard of U-[13C]-spirulina protein to measure amino acid (AA) digestibility with use of a dual stable isotope method. Individual AA digestibility in the test protein was calculated by the ratios of AA enrichments in the test protein to the standard protein in the food and their appearance in blood plasma collected at 6 and 6.5 h during the experiment, representing a plateau state.
Results: The mean AA digestibility of extruded chickpea and yellow pea protein in moderately stunted children (HAZ; -2.86 to -1.2) was high and similar in both extruded test proteins (89.0% and 88.0%, respectively, P = 0.83). However, lysine and proline digestibilities were higher in extruded chickpea than yellow pea (79.2% compared with 76.5% and 75.0% compared with 72.0%, respectively, P < 0.02).
Conclusion: Extruded chickpea and yellow pea protein had good IAA digestibility in moderately stunted children, which was 20% higher than an earlier report of their digestibility when pressure-cooked, measured by the same method in adults. Higher digestibility of lysine and proline highlights better retention of these AA in chickpea during extrusion-based processing. Extrusion might be useful for developing high-quality protein foods from legumes. This trial was registered at www.ctri.nic.in as CTRI/2018/03/012439.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jn/nxaa004 | DOI Listing |
Plant Physiol Biochem
November 2024
National Institute of Plant Genome Research, Aruna Asaf Ali Marg, PO Box No. 10531, New Delhi, 110067, India. Electronic address:
Metal ion transporters (MITs) are vital to maintain proper metal homeostasis during growth and development of plants thereby necessitating their identification and characterization. Considering the economic importance of chickpea in human nutrition, the molecular behaviour and biological functions of the metal ion transporters (MIT) encoding gene families remains highly relevant in recent times. Global identification of MITs revealed a total of 12 CAXs, 6 CTRs, 11 MGTs, 15 MTPs, 9 NRAMPs, 16 OPTs, and 14 ZIPs responsible for metal ion transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFoods
November 2024
National Institute of Research & Development for Food Bioresources, IBA Bucharest, 6 Dinu Vintila Street, 021102 Bucharest, Romania.
This study provides an assessment of nutrients (protein, amino acid profiles, fiber, starch), phenolic content TPC, flavonoid content TFC, and antioxidant capacity through different in vitro methods in 12 legume species (red, green, yellow, brown, and black lentils; mung, pinto, black, and kidney beans; chickpea, soy, and lupin) and hemp. Legumes with a protein content above 30% were black lentil, lupin, and soy. Chickpea, soy, black bean, kidney bean, and mung bean did not have any limiting amino acids.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFood Sci Nutr
September 2024
Department of Food Science and Technology, Toyserkan Faculty of Engineering and Natural Resources Bu-Ali Sina University Hamedan Iran.
The process of sprouting makes legumes better by changing their nutrition, chemicals, and taste. Ground sprouted chickpeas are commonly used as the main ingredient in falafel. The aim of this research was to study the impact of drying techniques that include hot-air, infrared, and microwave on the moisture, ash, total phenolics, antioxidant capacity, color, and rehydration ratio of dried ground sprouted chickpeas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Nutr
November 2024
Division of Nutrition, St. John's Research Institute, St. John's National Academy of Health Sciences (A Unit of CBCI Society for Medical Education), Bengaluru, India; Department of Physiology, St. John's Medical College, St. John's National Academy of Health Sciences, Bengaluru, India. Electronic address:
Background: Protein quality, evaluated using Digestible Indispensable Amino Acid Score (DIAAS), requires ileal digestibility values of individual indispensable amino acids (IAAs) in each protein. However, true tryptophan (Trp) digestibility has rarely been quantified in humans.
Objective: To measure the true Trp digestibility and DIAAS of H-intrinsically labeled plant and animal protein sources in humans, using the dual isotope tracer technique.
Plant Dis
August 2024
University of Saskatchewan, Department of Plant Sciences, Agriculture Building, 51 Campus Dr., Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, S7N 5A2;
Bean leafroll virus (BLRV; Bean leafroll virus), a single-stranded RNA virus in the genus Luteovirus, is phloem-limited and primarily transmitted by aphids in a non-propagative, persistent manner (Rashed et al., 2018; Kidanemariam and Abraham, 2023). BLRV infects various legumes and has been reported from major pulse-growing regions worldwide (Agindotan et al.
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