Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing

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Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing. / Heres, Alejandro; Li, Qian; Toldrá, Fidel; Lametsch, René; Mora, Leticia.

In: Meat Science, Vol. 206, 109323, 2023.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Heres, A, Li, Q, Toldrá, F, Lametsch, R & Mora, L 2023, 'Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing', Meat Science, vol. 206, 109323. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meatsci.2023.109323

APA

Heres, A., Li, Q., Toldrá, F., Lametsch, R., & Mora, L. (2023). Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing. Meat Science, 206, [109323]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meatsci.2023.109323

Vancouver

Heres A, Li Q, Toldrá F, Lametsch R, Mora L. Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing. Meat Science. 2023;206. 109323. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meatsci.2023.109323

Author

Heres, Alejandro ; Li, Qian ; Toldrá, Fidel ; Lametsch, René ; Mora, Leticia. / Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing. In: Meat Science. 2023 ; Vol. 206.

Bibtex

@article{0563bd4dd4b14341a2dc256b6da1aec8,
title = "Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing",
abstract = "The typical dry-cured ham flavor is rich in umami and brothy perceptions, for which short peptides may contribute. Particularly, γ-glutamyl peptides could be the responsible of these previously reported attributes, as they exert a synergistic interaction with other basic tastes and modify the intensity of salty, sweet, and umami tastes. The content of peptides has been reported to evolve along the processing, but no kokumi γ-glutamyl peptides have been identified in Spanish dry-cured hams yet. In this research, nine γ-glutamyl dipeptides (γ-EA, γ-EC, γ-EE, γ-EF, γ-EL, γ-EM, γ-EV, γ-EW, and γ-EY) and two γ-glutamyl tripeptides (GSH and γ-EVG) have been quantitated at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months of traditional processing of Spanish dry-cured ham by performing a Q Exactive Orbitrap-based tandem mass spectrometry. The results show an increase of γ-EA, γ-EE, γ-EF, γ-EL, γ-EM and γ-EVG, obtaining maximums at 24 months of curing ranging from 0.14 (γ-EVG) to 18.86 (γ-EL) μg/g dry-cured ham. Otherwise, γ-EV, γ-EW and γ-EY accumulated until the 18th month of storage to 15.10, 0.54 and 3.17 μg/g dry-cured ham, respectively; whereas γ-EC and GSH amounts decreased starting from 0.0676 and 4.41 μg/g dry-cured ham, respectively at earlier stages. The concentration dynamics of these compounds may be linked with proteolytic and oxidative reactions during processing. In addition, due to their synergistic effect on kokumi activity, this could constitute insights of the brothy perceptions of dry-cured ham, and these peptides probably contribute to the sensory differences existing in long processed Spanish dry-cured hams.",
keywords = "Dry-cured ham, Flavor, Kokumi, Peptidomics, γ-glutamyl peptides",
author = "Alejandro Heres and Qian Li and Fidel Toldr{\'a} and Ren{\'e} Lametsch and Leticia Mora",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2023 The Author(s)",
year = "2023",
doi = "10.1016/j.meatsci.2023.109323",
language = "English",
volume = "206",
journal = "Meat Science",
issn = "0309-1740",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Generation of kokumi γ-glutamyl short peptides in Spanish dry-cured ham during its processing

AU - Heres, Alejandro

AU - Li, Qian

AU - Toldrá, Fidel

AU - Lametsch, René

AU - Mora, Leticia

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s)

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - The typical dry-cured ham flavor is rich in umami and brothy perceptions, for which short peptides may contribute. Particularly, γ-glutamyl peptides could be the responsible of these previously reported attributes, as they exert a synergistic interaction with other basic tastes and modify the intensity of salty, sweet, and umami tastes. The content of peptides has been reported to evolve along the processing, but no kokumi γ-glutamyl peptides have been identified in Spanish dry-cured hams yet. In this research, nine γ-glutamyl dipeptides (γ-EA, γ-EC, γ-EE, γ-EF, γ-EL, γ-EM, γ-EV, γ-EW, and γ-EY) and two γ-glutamyl tripeptides (GSH and γ-EVG) have been quantitated at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months of traditional processing of Spanish dry-cured ham by performing a Q Exactive Orbitrap-based tandem mass spectrometry. The results show an increase of γ-EA, γ-EE, γ-EF, γ-EL, γ-EM and γ-EVG, obtaining maximums at 24 months of curing ranging from 0.14 (γ-EVG) to 18.86 (γ-EL) μg/g dry-cured ham. Otherwise, γ-EV, γ-EW and γ-EY accumulated until the 18th month of storage to 15.10, 0.54 and 3.17 μg/g dry-cured ham, respectively; whereas γ-EC and GSH amounts decreased starting from 0.0676 and 4.41 μg/g dry-cured ham, respectively at earlier stages. The concentration dynamics of these compounds may be linked with proteolytic and oxidative reactions during processing. In addition, due to their synergistic effect on kokumi activity, this could constitute insights of the brothy perceptions of dry-cured ham, and these peptides probably contribute to the sensory differences existing in long processed Spanish dry-cured hams.

AB - The typical dry-cured ham flavor is rich in umami and brothy perceptions, for which short peptides may contribute. Particularly, γ-glutamyl peptides could be the responsible of these previously reported attributes, as they exert a synergistic interaction with other basic tastes and modify the intensity of salty, sweet, and umami tastes. The content of peptides has been reported to evolve along the processing, but no kokumi γ-glutamyl peptides have been identified in Spanish dry-cured hams yet. In this research, nine γ-glutamyl dipeptides (γ-EA, γ-EC, γ-EE, γ-EF, γ-EL, γ-EM, γ-EV, γ-EW, and γ-EY) and two γ-glutamyl tripeptides (GSH and γ-EVG) have been quantitated at 6, 12, 18 and 24 months of traditional processing of Spanish dry-cured ham by performing a Q Exactive Orbitrap-based tandem mass spectrometry. The results show an increase of γ-EA, γ-EE, γ-EF, γ-EL, γ-EM and γ-EVG, obtaining maximums at 24 months of curing ranging from 0.14 (γ-EVG) to 18.86 (γ-EL) μg/g dry-cured ham. Otherwise, γ-EV, γ-EW and γ-EY accumulated until the 18th month of storage to 15.10, 0.54 and 3.17 μg/g dry-cured ham, respectively; whereas γ-EC and GSH amounts decreased starting from 0.0676 and 4.41 μg/g dry-cured ham, respectively at earlier stages. The concentration dynamics of these compounds may be linked with proteolytic and oxidative reactions during processing. In addition, due to their synergistic effect on kokumi activity, this could constitute insights of the brothy perceptions of dry-cured ham, and these peptides probably contribute to the sensory differences existing in long processed Spanish dry-cured hams.

KW - Dry-cured ham

KW - Flavor

KW - Kokumi

KW - Peptidomics

KW - γ-glutamyl peptides

U2 - 10.1016/j.meatsci.2023.109323

DO - 10.1016/j.meatsci.2023.109323

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 37708620

AN - SCOPUS:85170646811

VL - 206

JO - Meat Science

JF - Meat Science

SN - 0309-1740

M1 - 109323

ER -

ID: 369343181