4.6 Article

Nitrogen-to-Protein Conversion Factors for Edible Insects on the Swiss Market: T. molitor, A. domesticus, and L. migratoria

Journal

FRONTIERS IN NUTRITION
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2020.00089

Keywords

edible insects; nitrogen-to-protein conversion; amino acid profile; chitin; protein overestimation; amide nitrogen; protein recovery; true protein

Funding

  1. ETH Zurich, Switzerland

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With an increasing worldwide demand for animal protein, insects are becoming a promising sustainable option for meat protein replacement. However, reported protein contents of insects are often overestimated when calculated as crude protein = 6.25 x nitrogen content (N), compared to true protein contents quantified from the sum of amino acid (AA) residues. In this study, the main two types of usual nitrogen-to-protein conversion factorsk(p)andk(A)were determined on the basis of true protein/total nitrogen and true protein/protein nitrogen, respectively, with focus on the three insect species legally sold on the Swiss food market.T. molitor(mealworm larvae),A. domesticus(house crickets), andL. migratoria(locusts) from various breeders were analyzed for total and amide nitrogen, chitin, and AA composition. Careful control experiments of insect samples spiked with a protein standard were conducted to establish the recovery of true protein, which was with >95% excellent. Mealworms, crickets, and locusts exhibited similar AA-profiles and true protein contents of 51, 55, and 47 g/100 g (dry weight basis), respectively. Specific conversion factorsk(p)showed little variability between the three insect species with 5.41, 5.25, and 5.33 for mealworms, crickets, and locusts, respectively, and confirmed an average similar to 17% overestimation of protein contents when using 6.25 xN. The determined averagek(p)of 5.33 is supported by extracted literature data and is suggested for general use instead of 6.25 xNto calculate more accurate insect protein contents, whereas the average pure protein conversion factork(A)of 5.6 is proposed for use in the case of insect protein isolates.

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