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Mechanism of carbohydrate and protein conversion during sourdough fermentation: An analysis based on representative Chinese sourdough microbiota. | LitMetric

Mechanism of carbohydrate and protein conversion during sourdough fermentation: An analysis based on representative Chinese sourdough microbiota.

Int J Food Microbiol

College of Food Science and Nutritional Engineering, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100083, China. Electronic address:

Published: January 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Sourdough fermentation enhances the properties of leavened baked goods, but the mechanisms behind these changes are not fully understood, limiting its use.
  • The study investigated how lactic acid bacteria, when used alone or with yeast, affect dough characteristics, revealing that co-cultures improve nutritional properties and proteolysis while reducing organic acid content.
  • RNA sequencing and proteomic analysis showed that yeast enhances protein metabolism in lactic acid bacteria and highlighted key metabolic proteins in flour that influence carbohydrate metabolism, suggesting that multi-strain leavening agents can improve the nutritional value of sourdough products.

Article Abstract

Sourdough fermentation is attracting growing attention because of its positive effects on properties of leavened baked good. However, the changes in dough features and the mechanisms behind them are not well understood, which limits its widespread use. In this study, we assessed the effects of representative lactic acid bacteria in sourdough monoculture or co-culture with yeasts on dough characteristics. Physicochemical analysis identified increased proteolysis and enhanced nutritional properties of co-culture groups. However, a reduction in organic acids contents of co-culture groups compared to monoculture was detected, and this effect was not limited by the yeast species. The RNA sequencing further demonstrated that the presence of yeast enhanced the protein metabolic activity of lactic acid bacteria, while decreased its organic acid biosynthetic activity. Moreover, the proteomic analysis revealed that endogenous metabolic proteins of flour, such as pyruvate kinase, glucosyltransferase and pyruvate dehydrogenase play a key role in carbohydrate metabolism during fermentation. This study uncovered the influence of typical microorganisms and endogenous enzymes on dough characteristics based on different aspects. Bacteria-mediated consumption of proteins and increased proteolysis in co-culture groups may underlie the improved digestibility and nutritional effects of sourdough fermented products, which provides an important basis for nutrient fortified bread making with multi-strain leavening agent.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijfoodmicro.2023.110487DOI Listing

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