Abstract
Changes in free reduced glutathione (GSH), free oxidised glutathione (GSSG) and protein-glutathione mixed disulphides (PSSG) during dough mixing were monitored. After a rapid decrease in the GSH content and an increase in the GSSG content, the contents of both GSH and GSSG decreased progressively, whereas the PSSG content increased, as a simple flour-water dough was mixed. Total glutathione (GSH plus GSSG plus PSSG) levels in simple flour-water doughs and doughs treated with ascorbic acid or potassium bromate remained essentially constant during dough mixing, indicating that the reactions in which glutathione is involved are simple oxidations of sulphydryl (SH) groups to disulphide (SS) bonds and SH/SS interchange reactions. Yeast contributed high levels of GSH and GSSG to doughs, but analysis of dough aqueous phases (liquors) and the similarity of the PSSG contents of simple and yeasted flour-water doughs suggested that the yeast GSH and GSSG were largely unavailable to react with flour proteins. The GSH content of ascorbic-acid-treated and yeasted dough decreased rapidly on wetting the flour, the magnitude of the decrease indicating that the ascorbate oxidation system oxidised the yeast intracellular GSH as well as the flour GSH. With further mixing, the GSH content of the ascorbate dough remained constant at low levels similar to those of the simple flour-water dough. The GSSG content of the ascorbate dough increased rapidly on wetting the flour, but declined as dough mixing continued. The PSSG content of the doughs increased markedly as dough mixing proceeded to the optimum and then stabilised. The increase in the PSSG content lagged behind the rapid oxidation of GSH to GSSG. Potassium bromate caused a pattern of changes similar to those observed for ascorbate, but the changes in GSH and PSSG contents were smaller in magnitude. The results indicate that the changes in the different glutathione pools and the effects of oxidising bread improvers are rather more complex than envisaged previously, particularly the effects on PSSG.
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More From: Zeitschrift f�r Lebensmittel-Untersuchung und -Forschung
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