The physical characteristics of chyme during gastrointestinal digestion are considered to significantly affect nutrient digestion and absorption (such as glucose diffusion), which has an impact on postprandial satiety. The present study aims to analyze the hydration rate (HR) and rheological properties of deacetylated konjac glucomannan (DKGM) at different degrees and then explore their effects on rice texture, digestive properties, and the subjects' post-meal appetite. The present results show that, as the deacetylation degree (DD) of KGM increased, the intersection point of the viscoelastic modulus shifted to a high shear rate frequency, and as the swelling time of the DKGM was prolonged, its HR decreased significantly. The results of the in vitro gastrointestinal digestion tests show that the hardness and chewability of the rice in the fast-hydration group (MK1) were remarkably reduced. In contrast, the slow-hydration group (MK5) exhibited an outstanding ability to resist digestion. The kinetics of starch hydrolysis revealed that the HR of the rice in the fast-hydration group was 1.8 times faster than that of the slow-hydration group. Moreover, it was found that the subjects' appetite after the meal was highly related to the HR of the MK. Their hunger ( < 0.001), desire to eat ( < 0.001), and prospective food consumption ( < 0.001) were significantly inhibited in the slow-hydration group (MK5) compared to the control. This study explored the nutritional effects of the hydration properties derived from the DKGM, which may contribute to modifying the high glycemic index food and provide ideas for the fabrication of food with enhanced satiating capacity.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules29071681 | DOI Listing |
Molecules
April 2024
College of Biological and Food Engineering, Hubei Minzu University, Enshi 445002, China.
The physical characteristics of chyme during gastrointestinal digestion are considered to significantly affect nutrient digestion and absorption (such as glucose diffusion), which has an impact on postprandial satiety. The present study aims to analyze the hydration rate (HR) and rheological properties of deacetylated konjac glucomannan (DKGM) at different degrees and then explore their effects on rice texture, digestive properties, and the subjects' post-meal appetite. The present results show that, as the deacetylation degree (DD) of KGM increased, the intersection point of the viscoelastic modulus shifted to a high shear rate frequency, and as the swelling time of the DKGM was prolonged, its HR decreased significantly.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
May 2023
School of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Oklahoma State University, Stillwater, Oklahoma 74078, USA.
In this work, GHz and THz complex dielectric spectra of a polyethylene glycol dimethyl ether (2000 g/mol) aqueous solution were studied. The reorientation relaxation of water in this kind of macro-amphiphilic molecule solution can be well described by three Debye models, including under-coordinated water, bulk-like water [water molecules in a tetrahedral hydrogen bond network (bulk water) and bulk water molecules affected by hydrophobic groups], and slow hydrating water (water molecules donating hydrogen bonds to hydrophilic ether groups). The reorientation relaxation timescales of bulk-like water and slow hydration water both show increases with concentration from 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChembiochem
May 2020
Institute of Biotechnology and Biochemical Engineering, Graz University of Technology, NAWI Graz, Petersgasse 10/12, 8010, Graz, Austria.
The nitrile reductase QueF catalyzes NADPH-dependent reduction of the nitrile group of preQ (7-cyano-7-deazaguanine) into the primary amine of preQ (7-aminomethyl-7-deazaguanine), a biologically unique reaction important in bacterial nucleoside biosynthesis. Here we have discovered that the QueF from Escherichia coli-its D197A and E89L variants in particular (apparent k ≈10 min )-also catalyze the slow hydration of the C5=C6 double bond of the dihydronicotinamide moiety of NADPH. The enzymatically C6-hydrated NADPH is a 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Natl Acad Sci U S A
September 2005
Department of Bioscience, Karolinska Institutet, SE-14157 Huddinge, Sweden.
Time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy is used increasingly to probe molecular motions at the aqueous interfaces of biological macromolecules and membranes. By recording the time variation of the fluorescence frequency, thermal atomic fluctuations in the vicinity of the chromophore can be probed. From such fluorescence Stokes shift (FSS) experiments, it has been inferred that water motions in the hydration layer are slowed down by 1-3 orders of magnitude.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochim Biophys Acta
November 1990
Department of Medicinal Chemistry and Pharmacognosy, Purdue University School of Pharmacy, West Lafayette, IN 47907.
Infrared spectroscopy was used to investigate lipid conformational changes that occur in dilauroylphosphatidylcholine (diC12PC) bilayers with and without fatty-acid-amino-acids as guest molecules in the membrane. Incorporating 2.5 mole% N-decanoylglycine (decgly) into diC12PC liposomes caused formation of the antiplanar-antiplanar (ap-ap) phosphodiester conformation which was stable in room temperature IR spectra.
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