4.7 Article

ATR-FT/IR study on the interactions between gliadins and dextrin and their effects on protein secondary structure

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 53, Issue 5, Pages 1757-1764

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jf049061x

Keywords

heat treatment; water activity; attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared; spectroscopy; protein -polysaccharide interactions; hydrogen bonds

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The effects of heat treatment and dextrin addition on the secondary structure of gliadins were investigated by means of attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FT/IR). Gliadins and gliadin/dextrin mixtures (before and after thermal treatment) were prepared as a dried protein film on the ATR-FT/IR zinc selenide cell plate and equilibrated at a water activity (a(w)) of 0.06. The results show that gliadins undergo conformational changes upon thermal treatment both in the absence and in the presence of dextrin. In particular, in the thermally treated gliadins, the decrease of the band at around 1651 cm(-1) and the increase of the bands at around 1628 and 1690 cm-1 suggest a loss of a-helix structure and a higher content of protein aggregates. The same trend was observed in the presence of dextrin. Concerning the interactions between gliadins and dextrin, gliadin/dextrin mixtures show variations in the amide I region compared to native gliadins (e.g., an increase of the band at 1645 cm(-1) and the absence of the band at around 1668 cm(-1)) that might be due to hydrogen bond formation between gliadins and dextrin. It was also found that the spectrum of gliadin/dextrin mixtures was less affected by the hydration state than that of native gliadins, as observed from the differential spectra obtained by subtraction of the spectrum obtained at aw = 0.06 (driest condition tested) from the spectrum of the sample equilibrated at aw = 0.84. This could be due to the fact that C = O and N - H groups of gliadins are engaged to form hydrogen bonds with the hydroxyl groups of dextrin, and so they are not perturbed by the presence of water molecules. Finally, water activity effects on the secondary structure of gliadins are also discussed.

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