4.2 Article

Characterization of commercial cricket protein powder and impact of cricket protein powder replacement on wheat dough protein composition

Journal

CEREAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 100, Issue 3, Pages 574-586

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cche.10658

Keywords

cricket protein powder; functionality; molecular size distribution; water holding capacity; wheat dough enrichment

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This study characterized two commercially available cricket protein powders (GrioPro and Entomo Farms) and investigated their impact on molecular weight distribution when incorporated into wheat dough. The results showed that the functionality of the protein powders increased as the pH increased. Sample E had lower water holding capacity and sample G had lower solubility across all pH levels. Additionally, doughs containing sample G at the 20% replacement level had a significant increase in insoluble polymeric proteins. This study demonstrates how processing differences affect the functionality of cricket protein powders in a wheat dough-based system.
Background and ObjectivesSupplementation of foods with insect flours has been shown to be promising for improving the nutritional profile of food products. The objective of this study was to characterize two commercially available cricket protein powders and investigate their impact on molecular weight distribution when incorporated into wheat dough. FindingsCharacterization of commercial cricket protein powders, GrioPro (R) (G) and Entomo Farms (E) was carried out by size exclusion high-performance liquid chromatography (SEC-HPLC), and sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). The functionality of the cricket protein powders was examined by measuring water holding capacity (WHC) and protein solubility across a range of pH. To see the interactions between the cricket proteins in a food-based system wheat dough samples containing 10% or 20% replacement levels of the cricket powders were collected at peak torque development and analyzed to SEC-HPLC to quantify the change in soluble polymeric proteins (SPP) and insoluble polymeric proteins (IPP) and provide information on changes to protein molecular weight distribution. SDS-PAGE analysis showed bands ranging from 40 kDa to 160 kDa for sample E while sample G had no visible bands either due to poor solubility in SDS-PAGE sample buffer and/or the presence of very high molecular proteins that did not enter the gel. Sample E absorbed approximately 2.5 times its weight in water, which was significantly lower than G (similar to 3.0 times its weight) while sample G was significantly lower in solubility than E across all pH levels. ConclusionsBoth cricket protein powders increased in WHC and solubility as the pH increased. Wheat dough samples containing sample E had lower peak areas of IPP and no significant difference in SPP peak areas compared to the control. On the other hand, doughs containing sample G had a significant increase in IPP peak areas at the 20% replacement level. Significance and NoveltyThis study shows how the difference in processing changed the functionality of G and E which impacted their interactions when added to a wheat dough-based system.

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