Influence of different sources of vegetable, whey and microalgae proteins on the physicochemical properties and amino acid profile of fresh pork sausages
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2019
Authors
Marti-Quijal, Francisco J.Zamuz, Sol

Tomašević, Igor

Gomez, Belen
Rocchetti, Gabriele

Lucini, Luigi

Remize, Fabienne

Barba, Francisco J.

Lorenzo, José M.

Article (Published version)

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The purpose of this study was to evaluate changes in the physicochemical properties and amino acid profiles of pork sausages prepared by including vegetable protein sources (beans, peas, and lentils), microalgae (Chiorella and Spirulina) or whey, as compared with a control (soy protein). Significant differences were found for all the studied parameters. The protein content was significantly lower in sausages made with pea protein compared with the control. Colour parameters changed significantly after the incorporation of microalgae proteins. Moreover, significant differences among treatments were observed in the amino acid profile. The inclusion of spirulina proteins resulted in an increase in the total amino acid content and the ratio of essential/non-essential amino acids. Orthogonal Projections to Latent Structures Discriminant Analysis (OPLS-DA) allowed pork sausages to be classified according to the protein source, in comparison with soy (control). Textural parameters (chewiness,... gumminess and hardness) followed by colour and pH were the most discriminant parameters. Considering texture traits, physicochemical parameters and amino acid profiles across treatments, proteins from legumes and whey provided profiles closer to that of soy. However, although microalgae-derived proteins altered the colour and texture, they provided nutritionally favourable profiles, thus suggesting that seaweeds could also be used to enrich pork sausages, as an alternative to soy protein.
Keywords:
Seaweed / Colour parameters / Chiorella and Spirulina / textural traits / Beans / LentilsSource:
LWT-Food Science and Technology, 2019, 110, 316-323Publisher:
- Elsevier Science Bv, Amsterdam
Funding / projects:
- FEDER INTERCONECTAEuropean Union (EU) [ITC-20151395]
- CYTED [116RT0503]
- EU Commission by the BBI-JU through the H2020 Project AQUABIOPROFIT 'Aquaculture and agriculture biomass side stream proteins and bioactives for feed, fitness and health promoting nutritional supplements' [790956]
DOI: 10.1016/j.lwt.2019.04.097
ISSN: 0023-6438
WoS: 000471736200041
Scopus: 2-s2.0-85065397566
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Institution/Community
Poljoprivredni fakultetTY - JOUR AU - Marti-Quijal, Francisco J. AU - Zamuz, Sol AU - Tomašević, Igor AU - Gomez, Belen AU - Rocchetti, Gabriele AU - Lucini, Luigi AU - Remize, Fabienne AU - Barba, Francisco J. AU - Lorenzo, José M. PY - 2019 UR - http://aspace.agrif.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5101 AB - The purpose of this study was to evaluate changes in the physicochemical properties and amino acid profiles of pork sausages prepared by including vegetable protein sources (beans, peas, and lentils), microalgae (Chiorella and Spirulina) or whey, as compared with a control (soy protein). Significant differences were found for all the studied parameters. The protein content was significantly lower in sausages made with pea protein compared with the control. Colour parameters changed significantly after the incorporation of microalgae proteins. Moreover, significant differences among treatments were observed in the amino acid profile. The inclusion of spirulina proteins resulted in an increase in the total amino acid content and the ratio of essential/non-essential amino acids. Orthogonal Projections to Latent Structures Discriminant Analysis (OPLS-DA) allowed pork sausages to be classified according to the protein source, in comparison with soy (control). Textural parameters (chewiness, gumminess and hardness) followed by colour and pH were the most discriminant parameters. Considering texture traits, physicochemical parameters and amino acid profiles across treatments, proteins from legumes and whey provided profiles closer to that of soy. However, although microalgae-derived proteins altered the colour and texture, they provided nutritionally favourable profiles, thus suggesting that seaweeds could also be used to enrich pork sausages, as an alternative to soy protein. PB - Elsevier Science Bv, Amsterdam T2 - LWT-Food Science and Technology T1 - Influence of different sources of vegetable, whey and microalgae proteins on the physicochemical properties and amino acid profile of fresh pork sausages EP - 323 SP - 316 VL - 110 DO - 10.1016/j.lwt.2019.04.097 ER -
@article{ author = "Marti-Quijal, Francisco J. and Zamuz, Sol and Tomašević, Igor and Gomez, Belen and Rocchetti, Gabriele and Lucini, Luigi and Remize, Fabienne and Barba, Francisco J. and Lorenzo, José M.", year = "2019", abstract = "The purpose of this study was to evaluate changes in the physicochemical properties and amino acid profiles of pork sausages prepared by including vegetable protein sources (beans, peas, and lentils), microalgae (Chiorella and Spirulina) or whey, as compared with a control (soy protein). Significant differences were found for all the studied parameters. The protein content was significantly lower in sausages made with pea protein compared with the control. Colour parameters changed significantly after the incorporation of microalgae proteins. Moreover, significant differences among treatments were observed in the amino acid profile. The inclusion of spirulina proteins resulted in an increase in the total amino acid content and the ratio of essential/non-essential amino acids. Orthogonal Projections to Latent Structures Discriminant Analysis (OPLS-DA) allowed pork sausages to be classified according to the protein source, in comparison with soy (control). Textural parameters (chewiness, gumminess and hardness) followed by colour and pH were the most discriminant parameters. Considering texture traits, physicochemical parameters and amino acid profiles across treatments, proteins from legumes and whey provided profiles closer to that of soy. However, although microalgae-derived proteins altered the colour and texture, they provided nutritionally favourable profiles, thus suggesting that seaweeds could also be used to enrich pork sausages, as an alternative to soy protein.", publisher = "Elsevier Science Bv, Amsterdam", journal = "LWT-Food Science and Technology", title = "Influence of different sources of vegetable, whey and microalgae proteins on the physicochemical properties and amino acid profile of fresh pork sausages", pages = "323-316", volume = "110", doi = "10.1016/j.lwt.2019.04.097" }
Marti-Quijal, F. J., Zamuz, S., Tomašević, I., Gomez, B., Rocchetti, G., Lucini, L., Remize, F., Barba, F. J.,& Lorenzo, J. M.. (2019). Influence of different sources of vegetable, whey and microalgae proteins on the physicochemical properties and amino acid profile of fresh pork sausages. in LWT-Food Science and Technology Elsevier Science Bv, Amsterdam., 110, 316-323. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lwt.2019.04.097
Marti-Quijal FJ, Zamuz S, Tomašević I, Gomez B, Rocchetti G, Lucini L, Remize F, Barba FJ, Lorenzo JM. Influence of different sources of vegetable, whey and microalgae proteins on the physicochemical properties and amino acid profile of fresh pork sausages. in LWT-Food Science and Technology. 2019;110:316-323. doi:10.1016/j.lwt.2019.04.097 .
Marti-Quijal, Francisco J., Zamuz, Sol, Tomašević, Igor, Gomez, Belen, Rocchetti, Gabriele, Lucini, Luigi, Remize, Fabienne, Barba, Francisco J., Lorenzo, José M., "Influence of different sources of vegetable, whey and microalgae proteins on the physicochemical properties and amino acid profile of fresh pork sausages" in LWT-Food Science and Technology, 110 (2019):316-323, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lwt.2019.04.097 . .