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Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations

To secure a sustainable food supply for the rapidly growing global population, great efforts towards a plant-based diet are underway. However, the use of plant proteins comes with several challenges, such as improvement or removal of undesired flavours, and generation of desired texture properties....

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Autores principales: Engels, Wim, Siu, Jamie, van Schalkwijk, Saskia, Wesselink, Wilma, Jacobs, Simon, Bachmann, Herwig
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8997616/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35407092
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11071005
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author Engels, Wim
Siu, Jamie
van Schalkwijk, Saskia
Wesselink, Wilma
Jacobs, Simon
Bachmann, Herwig
author_facet Engels, Wim
Siu, Jamie
van Schalkwijk, Saskia
Wesselink, Wilma
Jacobs, Simon
Bachmann, Herwig
author_sort Engels, Wim
collection PubMed
description To secure a sustainable food supply for the rapidly growing global population, great efforts towards a plant-based diet are underway. However, the use of plant proteins comes with several challenges, such as improvement or removal of undesired flavours, and generation of desired texture properties. Fermentation holds large potential to alter these properties, but compared to dairy fermentations, our knowledge on strain properties in different plant-based substrates is still limited. Here, we explored different lactic acid bacteria for their ability to grow, produce flavour compounds, or remove off-flavour compounds from different plant proteins. For this, 151 LAB strains from dairy and non-dairy origins were cultured in plant protein plus coconut oil emulsions supplemented with glucose. Pea, chickpea, mung, fava, and soybean proteins were used in the study and bacterial strains for screening included the genera Streptococcus, Lactococcus, Lactobacillus, and Leuconostoc. Efficient, high throughput, screening on plant proteins was developed and strains were assessed for their ability to (i) acidify and decrease the pH; (ii) express key enzymes involved in the formation of amino acid derived flavours, which included PepN (aminopeptidase N), PepXP (X-prolyl dipeptidyl peptidase), EstA (esterase), BcAT (branched chain aminotransferase), CBL (cystathione beta lyase), and ArAT (aromatic aminotransferase); and (iii) improve the overall aroma profile by generating dairy/cheesy notes and decreasing off flavours. Suitable screening conditions were determined, and highlighted the importance that a sufficient heat treatment must be applied to samples containing plant proteins, prior to fermentation, as an outgrowth of spore forming Bacillus cereus was observed if the material was only pasteurised. Enzyme activities for strains measured in rich broth vs. a buffered protein solution showed little-to-no correlation, which illustrated the importance of screening conditions to obtain predictive enzyme measurements. Aroma formation analysis allowed to identify strains that were able to increase key aromas such as diacetyl, acetoin, 2- and 3-methyl butanol, and 2,3-pentanedione, as well as decrease the off-flavours hexanal, pentanal, and nonanal. Our findings illustrate the importance of strain specific differences in the assessed functionalities and how a methodical approach to screening LAB can be applied to select suitable microorganisms that show promise in fermentation of plant proteins when applied in non-dairy cheese applications.
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spelling pubmed-89976162022-04-12 Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations Engels, Wim Siu, Jamie van Schalkwijk, Saskia Wesselink, Wilma Jacobs, Simon Bachmann, Herwig Foods Article To secure a sustainable food supply for the rapidly growing global population, great efforts towards a plant-based diet are underway. However, the use of plant proteins comes with several challenges, such as improvement or removal of undesired flavours, and generation of desired texture properties. Fermentation holds large potential to alter these properties, but compared to dairy fermentations, our knowledge on strain properties in different plant-based substrates is still limited. Here, we explored different lactic acid bacteria for their ability to grow, produce flavour compounds, or remove off-flavour compounds from different plant proteins. For this, 151 LAB strains from dairy and non-dairy origins were cultured in plant protein plus coconut oil emulsions supplemented with glucose. Pea, chickpea, mung, fava, and soybean proteins were used in the study and bacterial strains for screening included the genera Streptococcus, Lactococcus, Lactobacillus, and Leuconostoc. Efficient, high throughput, screening on plant proteins was developed and strains were assessed for their ability to (i) acidify and decrease the pH; (ii) express key enzymes involved in the formation of amino acid derived flavours, which included PepN (aminopeptidase N), PepXP (X-prolyl dipeptidyl peptidase), EstA (esterase), BcAT (branched chain aminotransferase), CBL (cystathione beta lyase), and ArAT (aromatic aminotransferase); and (iii) improve the overall aroma profile by generating dairy/cheesy notes and decreasing off flavours. Suitable screening conditions were determined, and highlighted the importance that a sufficient heat treatment must be applied to samples containing plant proteins, prior to fermentation, as an outgrowth of spore forming Bacillus cereus was observed if the material was only pasteurised. Enzyme activities for strains measured in rich broth vs. a buffered protein solution showed little-to-no correlation, which illustrated the importance of screening conditions to obtain predictive enzyme measurements. Aroma formation analysis allowed to identify strains that were able to increase key aromas such as diacetyl, acetoin, 2- and 3-methyl butanol, and 2,3-pentanedione, as well as decrease the off-flavours hexanal, pentanal, and nonanal. Our findings illustrate the importance of strain specific differences in the assessed functionalities and how a methodical approach to screening LAB can be applied to select suitable microorganisms that show promise in fermentation of plant proteins when applied in non-dairy cheese applications. MDPI 2022-03-29 /pmc/articles/PMC8997616/ /pubmed/35407092 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11071005 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Engels, Wim
Siu, Jamie
van Schalkwijk, Saskia
Wesselink, Wilma
Jacobs, Simon
Bachmann, Herwig
Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations
title Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations
title_full Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations
title_fullStr Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations
title_full_unstemmed Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations
title_short Metabolic Conversions by Lactic Acid Bacteria during Plant Protein Fermentations
title_sort metabolic conversions by lactic acid bacteria during plant protein fermentations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8997616/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35407092
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/foods11071005
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