บทคัดย่องานวิจัย

Factors affecting sorghum protein digestibility

K. G. Duodu, J. R. N. Taylor, P. S. Belton and B. R. Hamaker

Journal of Cereal Science Volume 38, Issue 2 , September 2003, Pages 117-131

2003

บทคัดย่อ

Factors affecting sorghum protein digestibility In the semi-arid tropics worldwide, sorghum (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench) is cultivated by farmers o­n a subsistence level and consumed as food by humans. A nutritional limitation to its use is the poor digestibility of sorghum protein when wet cooked. The factors affecting wet cooked sorghum protein digestibility may be categorised into two main groups: exogenous factors (grain organisational structure, polyphenols, phytic acid, starch and non-starch polysaccharides) and endogenous factors (disulphide and non-disulphide crosslinking, kafirin hydrophobicity and changes in protein secondary structure). All these factors have been shown to influence sorghum protein digestibility. More than o­ne factor may be at play at any time depending o­n the nature or the state in which the sorghum grain is; that is whether whole grain, endosperm, protein body preparation, high-tannin or condensed-tannin-free. It is proposed that protein crosslinking may be the greatest factor that influences sorghum protein digestibility. This may be between g- and b-kafirin proteins at the protein body periphery, which may impede digestion of the centrally located major storage protein, a-kafirin, or between g- or b-kafirin and a-kafirin.