molecular weight distribution of flour proteins in intermediate … · 2018. 5. 21. · •...

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INTRODUCTION Thinopyrum intermedium, commonly known as intermediate wheatgrass (IWG) is a novel perennial crop, with both environmental and nutritional benefits (1 and 2). IWG is currently mainly used as a forage but shows great potential to be developed as a grain crop. IWG has higher protein, fiber and antioxidant contents than that of common wheat (3). IWG is mainly consisting of gliadins and low molecular weight glutenins (LMWG) and deficient in high molecular weight glutenins (HMWG) suggesting a poor gluten forming ability (4 and 5). Therefore, the objective of this study was to better understand the protein distribution of IWG lines and its relationship to bread-making quality parameters. CONCLUSIONS IWG samples have higher extractable albumins and globulins compared to the wheat controls while wheat samples have higher unextractable HMWPP in contrast to IWG. Unextractable UP1 (HMWPP) of IWG has significant and positive correlation with dough stability and extensibility. Extractable EP4 (gliadins) of IWG has significant and positive correlation with water absorption. Despite the higher protein content, all 17 IWG varieties are deficient of HMWG which is responsible for strength and elasticity of the dough. HMWG present in IWG are of lower molecular weight in size but confirmed as HMWG by LC-MS/MS. The molecular weight of intact proteins from all fractions of SE-HPLC will be determined by MALDI-TOF METHOD Materials: 16 different IWG lines, grown by the Plant Genetics Department at the University of Minnesota along with two wheat controls, Hard Red Wheat (HRW) and Arapahoe. Extraction and Protein Fractionation: Flour proteins were extracted by SDS buffer and extractable and unextractable protein fractions were analyzed for molecular weight distribution by size exclusion HPLC (SE-HPLC) (6). Statistical Analysis: Correlation coefficients were calculated using the CORR procedure in SAS. Mass Spectrometry Analysis: In gel chymotrypsin digestion was performed and followed by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Rheological Properties. Farinograph was done for optimum water absorption, peak time and stability. Kieffer method was used for dough extensibility. Protein Quantification. Determined by a nitrogen analyzer following the AOAC Dumas method. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This project was supported through research grants provided by the Forever Green Initiative, Minnesota Department of Agriculture and a gift fund by the Land Institute, Kansas. REFERENCES 1. Wagoner, P. and Schauer, A. Intermediate wheatgrass as a perennial grain crop. Advances in New Crops 1990; 143-145. 2. Vogel, K. P., and Jensen, K. J. Adaptation of perennial triticeae to the eastern Central Great Plains. J. Range Manage 2001; 54:674-697. 3. Bunzel, M., Tyl, C. E. and Ismail, B. Chemical composition of intermediate wheatgrass. (Abstr.) Cereal Foods World 2014; 59:A11. 4. Marti, A., Qiu , X.,Schoenfuss, T. and Seetharaman, K. Characteristics of perennial wheatgrass (Thinopyrum intermedium) and refined wheat flour blends: impact on rheological properties, Cereal Chem 2015; 92(5):434–440. 5. Becker, R., Wagoner, P., Hanners, G. D. and Saunders, R. M. Compositional, nutritional and functional evaluation of intermediate wheatgrass (Thinopyrum intermedium). J. Food Process Preserv 1991. 15:63-77. 6. Ohm, J., Hareland, G., Simsek, S., Seabourn, B., Maghirang, E. and Dowell, F. Molecular weight distribution of proteins in hard red spring wheat: relationship to quality parameters and intrasample uniformity. Cereal Chem (2010). 87(6):553–560. Molecular Weight Distribution of Flour Proteins in Intermediate Wheatgrass (Thinopyrum Intermedium): Impact on End-Use Quality Parameters QR Code Contact Information: C . Gajadeera at [email protected] C. GAJADEERA 1 , J. OHM 2 , K. WHITNEY 3 , C. RAHARDJO 1 , S. SIMSEK 3 , B. ISMAIL 1 1Department of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 55108 2USDA-ARS Cereal Crops Research Unit, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND 58102 3Department of Plant Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo ND 58102 Figure 4. SDS-PAGE visualization of gluten protein profile Lane 1: Molecular weight marker Lane 2: Hard red wheat Lane 3: Arapahoe Lane 4: Bulk IWG Lane 5: IWG L4-160 Lane 6: IWG L4-157 Lane 7: IWG L4-1 Lane 8: IWG L4-32 Lane 9: IWG L4-85 202 114 73 47 34 17 kDa 27 6 2 1 4 3 5 6 7 13 12 11 10 202 114 73 34 47 27 17 6 kDa 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 HMWG ω-gliadins LMWG LMWG & α,β and γ-gliadins RESULTS 8 9 Marker HRW Bulk-IWG Protein band ID Allele (species) a Assigned Protein No. of unique peptides Coverage b 1 T. intermediuam gi311360246 α-gliadin 3 8% 2 T. aestivum gi.385845947 LMWG 4 9% 3 T. aestivum gi. 401787278 α-gliadin 1 6% 4 T. intermedium gi.31136023 α-gliadin 2 6% 5 T. aestivum gi.513130029 LMWG 2 15% 6 T. intermedium gi.572923925 HMWG 3 17% 7 T. intermedium gi.572923923 HMWG 9 22% 8 T. intermedium gi.572923923 HMWG 11 20% 9 T. Intermedium gi.572923919 HMWG 4 16% 10 T. Intermedium gi.572923917 HMWG 4 25% 11 T. Intermedium gi.572923917 HMWG 4 19% 12 T. Intermedium gi.572923931 HMWG 8 13% 13 T. Intermedium gi.572923931 HMWG 16 22% Figure 5. SDS-PAGE visualization of gluten proteins selected for molecular identification The chymotrypsin in-gel digestion of proteins for the analysis of LC- MS/MS -1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 3 4 5 6 7 8 r value Retention time (min) SDS Extractable Chromatogram r value P=0.05 P=0.01 -1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 3 4 5 6 7 8 r value Retention time (min) SDS Unextractable Chromatogram r value P=0.05 P=0.01 Farinograph Kieffer Protein Fraction Water Absorption Stability Extensibility Protein % SDS Extractable EP1 0.46 (ns) 0.04 (ns) -0.38 (ns) 0.58* EP2 0.27 (ns) -0.07 (ns) -0.40 (ns) 0.45 (ns) EP3 0.28 (ns) -0.03 (ns) -0.40 (ns) 0.61** EP4 0.51* -0.43 (ns) -0.42 (ns) 0.69** EP5 0.20 (ns) 0.02 (ns) -0.33 (ns) 0.130 (ns) SDS Unextractable UP1 0.41 (ns) 0.81*** 0.69** 0.52* UP2 0.52* 0.27 (ns) 0.62** 0.69** UP3 0.44 (ns) 0.05 (ns) 0.51* 0.66** UP4 0.40 (ns) -0.21(ns) 0.32 (ns) 0.61** UP5 0.34 (ns) -0.32 (ns) 0.26 (ns) 0.32 (ns) -1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 3 4 5 6 7 8 r value Retention time (min) SDS Unextractable Chromatogram r value P=0.05 P=0.01 Extractable Protein Percentage (% of Total Protein) Unextractable Protein Percentage (% of Total Protein) Sample ID HMWPP LMWPP ω-gliadin α,β and γ gliadin Albumin and Globulin HMWPP LMWPP ω- gliadin α,β and γ gliadin Albumin and Globulin HRW 13.6 4.44 5.00 31.7 18.1 12.83 3.90 2.13 4.85 3.33 Arapahoe 14.4 4.67 5.10 32.8 18.9 10.92 3.59 2.01 4.43 3.07 Bulk IWG 16.1 7.42 5.71 33.8 21.1 7.73 1.78 1.05 2.80 2.34 IWG L4-1 15.7 8.20 5.89 37.5 21.4 3.77 1.24 0.83 2.90 2.40 IWG L4-3 14.9 7.79 5.67 34.4 19.5 5.45 1.93 1.34 5.11 3.72 IWG L4-29 15.0 6.66 5.08 35.4 18.9 5.01 1.92 1.36 6.49 4.00 IWG L4-32 17.4 7.88 5.80 35.6 22.5 2.94 1.04 0.77 2.94 3.00 IWG L4-57 17.9 8.21 6.28 37.5 19.0 3.36 1.18 0.86 3.17 2.46 IWG L4-72 17.1 7.94 5.39 33.4 20.5 5.31 1.73 1.13 4.13 3.26 IWG L4-84 14.5 6.77 5.24 36.3 17.6 6.40 2.17 1.45 5.85 3.60 IWG L4-85 14.9 6.75 5.08 35.9 18.9 5.36 1.95 1.34 5.86 3.81 IWG L4-103 16.7 7.87 5.82 33.4 21.9 3.48 1.43 1.09 4.49 3.71 IWG L4-105 16.0 7.22 5.46 36.6 21.6 4.27 1.36 0.92 3.49 2.93 IWG L4-139 15.8 7.53 5.31 35.5 19.2 4.87 1.91 1.28 5.01 3.46 IWG L4-154 15.8 7.98 5.99 37.1 21.4 4.33 1.32 0.87 2.72 2.29 IWG L4-157 14.8 7.03 5.57 36.3 21.4 4.16 1.54 1.12 4.66 3.30 IWG L4-159 15.5 7.22 5.42 33.4 17.9 5.22 2.20 1.62 7.19 4.13 IWG L4-160 16.3 7.63 5.36 36.0 21.7 4.23 1.41 0.93 3.20 2.78 IWG L4-172 15.2 7.95 5.76 35.3 21.7 4.28 1.49 1.07 3.77 3.36 Figure 3: Correlation coefficients (r) of SE-HPLC absorbance area values of SDS-extractable proteins with farinograph water absorption (A), SE-HPLC absorbance area values of SDS-unextractable proteins with farinograph peak time (B) and stability (C). Table 1. Protein components from extractable and unextractable fractions EP, SDS-extractable proteins; UP, SDS-unextractable proteins; 1, HMWPP; 2, LMWPP; 3, ω-gliadins; 4, α, β and γ-gliadins; 5, albumin and globulin** and ***, significance at P < 0.01 and P < 0.001 respectively. ns, not significant at P < 0.05 Table 2. Correlation coefficients between quality parameters and protein fractions Table 3: Molecular identification of extracted gluten proteins by LC-MS/MS a GI accession number of the best matched sequence in NCBI b The percentage of amino acid sequence coverage from unique peptides matched to the full-length protein sequences. -50 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Absorbance at 214 nm Retention Time (min) SDS-Extractable Proteins Average_Bulk IWG Average_HRWW -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 10 20 30 40 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Absorbance at 214 nm Retention Time (min) SDS-Unextractable Proteins Average_Bulk IWG Average_HRWW Figure 1: SE-HPLC chromatograms of IWG and wheat. SDS-extractable proteins (A); SDS-unextractable proteins (B) A B -1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 3 4 5 6 7 8 r value Retention time (min) SDS Unextractable Chromatogram r value P=0.05 P=0.01 -1.0 -0.8 -0.6 -0.4 -0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 1.0 3 4 5 6 7 8 r value Retention time (min) SDS Unextractable Chromatogram r value P=0.05 P=0.01 Figure 2: Correlation coefficients (r) of SE-HPLC absorbance area values of SDS-unextractable proteins with dough extensibility (A) and flour protein content (B) A B A B C F1, 3.5-5.5 min: HMWPP (High Molecular Weight Polymeric Protein) F2, 5.5-5.9 min: LMWPP (Low Molecular Weight Polymeric Protein) F3, 5.9-6.2 min: ω-gliadins F4, 6.2-6.9 min: α,β and γ gliadins F5, 6.9-8.0 min: albumins and globulins

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  • INTRODUCTION• Thinopyrum intermedium, commonly known as

    intermediate wheatgrass (IWG) is a novel perennial crop,with both environmental and nutritional benefits (1 and 2).

    • IWG is currently mainly used as a forage but shows greatpotential to be developed as a grain crop.

    • IWG has higher protein, fiber and antioxidant contentsthan that of common wheat (3).

    • IWG is mainly consisting of gliadins and low molecularweight glutenins (LMWG) and deficient in high molecularweight glutenins (HMWG) suggesting a poor gluten formingability (4 and 5).

    • Therefore, the objective of this study was to betterunderstand the protein distribution of IWG lines and itsrelationship to bread-making quality parameters.

    CONCLUSIONS• IWG samples have higher extractable albumins and globulins compared to

    the wheat controls while wheat samples have higher unextractable HMWPPin contrast to IWG.

    • Unextractable UP1 (HMWPP) of IWG has significant and positive correlationwith dough stability and extensibility.

    • Extractable EP4 (gliadins) of IWG has significant and positive correlation withwater absorption.

    • Despite the higher protein content, all 17 IWG varieties are deficient ofHMWG which is responsible for strength and elasticity of the dough.

    • HMWG present in IWG are of lower molecular weight in size but confirmed asHMWG by LC-MS/MS.

    • The molecular weight of intact proteins from all fractions of SE-HPLC will bedetermined by MALDI-TOF

    METHODMaterials: 16 different IWG lines, grown by the Plant GeneticsDepartment at the University of Minnesota along with twowheat controls, Hard Red Wheat (HRW) and Arapahoe.

    Extraction and Protein Fractionation: Flour proteins wereextracted by SDS buffer and extractable and unextractableprotein fractions were analyzed for molecular weightdistribution by size exclusion HPLC (SE-HPLC) (6).

    Statistical Analysis: Correlation coefficients were calculatedusing the CORR procedure in SAS.

    Mass Spectrometry Analysis: In gel chymotrypsin digestion was performed and followed by liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS).

    Rheological Properties. Farinograph was done for optimumwater absorption, peak time and stability. Kieffer method wasused for dough extensibility.

    Protein Quantification. Determined by a nitrogen analyzerfollowing the AOAC Dumas method.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENTSThis project was supported through research grants provided by the ForeverGreen Initiative, Minnesota Department of Agriculture and a gift fund by theLand Institute, Kansas.

    REFERENCES 1. Wagoner, P. and Schauer, A. Intermediate wheatgrass as a perennial grain crop.

    Advances in New Crops 1990; 143-145.2. Vogel, K. P., and Jensen, K. J. Adaptation of perennial triticeae to the eastern Central

    Great Plains. J. Range Manage 2001; 54:674-697.3. Bunzel, M., Tyl, C. E. and Ismail, B. Chemical composition of intermediate wheatgrass.

    (Abstr.) Cereal Foods World 2014; 59:A11.4. Marti, A., Qiu , X.,Schoenfuss, T. and Seetharaman, K. Characteristics of perennial

    wheatgrass (Thinopyrum intermedium) and refined wheat flour blends: impact on rheological properties, Cereal Chem 2015; 92(5):434–440.

    5. Becker, R., Wagoner, P., Hanners, G. D. and Saunders, R. M. Compositional, nutritional and functional evaluation of intermediate wheatgrass (Thinopyrum intermedium). J. Food Process Preserv 1991. 15:63-77.

    6. Ohm, J., Hareland, G., Simsek, S., Seabourn, B., Maghirang, E. and Dowell, F.Molecular weight distribution of proteins in hard red spring wheat: relationship to quality parameters and intrasample uniformity. Cereal Chem (2010). 87(6):553–560.

    Molecular Weight Distribution of Flour Proteins in Intermediate Wheatgrass (Thinopyrum Intermedium): Impact on End-Use Quality Parameters QR

    CodeContact Information: C . Gajadeera at [email protected]

    C. GAJADEERA1, J. OHM2, K. WHITNEY3, C. RAHARDJO1, S. SIMSEK3, B. ISMAIL1

    1Department of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Minnesota, St. Paul, MN 551082USDA-ARS Cereal Crops Research Unit, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND 581023Department of Plant Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo ND 58102

    Figure 4. SDS-PAGE visualization ofgluten protein profileLane 1: Molecular weight marker Lane 2: Hard red wheat Lane 3: ArapahoeLane 4: Bulk IWG Lane 5: IWG L4-160Lane 6: IWG L4-157Lane 7: IWG L4-1Lane 8: IWG L4-32Lane 9: IWG L4-85

    202

    114

    73

    47

    34

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    kDa

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    13121110

    202

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    27176

    kDa1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9

    HMWGω-gliadinsLMWG

    LMWG & α,β and γ-gliadins

    RESULTS

    89

    Marker HRW Bulk-IWG

    Proteinband ID Allele (species) a

    Assigned Protein

    No. of unique peptides Coverageb

    1 T. intermediuam gi311360246 α-gliadin 3 8%

    2 T. aestivum gi.385845947 LMWG 4 9%

    3 T. aestivum gi. 401787278 α-gliadin 1 6%

    4 T. intermedium gi.31136023 α-gliadin 2 6%

    5 T. aestivum gi.513130029 LMWG 2 15%

    6 T. intermedium gi.572923925 HMWG 3 17%

    7 T. intermedium gi.572923923 HMWG 9 22%

    8 T. intermedium gi.572923923 HMWG 11 20%

    9 T. Intermedium gi.572923919 HMWG 4 16%

    10 T. Intermedium gi.572923917 HMWG 4 25%

    11 T. Intermedium gi.572923917 HMWG 4 19%

    12 T. Intermedium gi.572923931 HMWG 8 13%

    13 T. Intermedium gi.572923931 HMWG 16 22%

    Figure 5. SDS-PAGE visualization ofgluten proteins selected formolecular identificationThe chymotrypsin in-gel digestionof proteins for the analysis of LC-MS/MS

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    Protein FractionWaterAbsorption Stability Extensibility Protein %

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    EP1 0.46 (ns)0.04 (ns) -0.38 (ns) 0.58*

    EP2 0.27 (ns) -0.07 (ns) -0.40 (ns) 0.45 (ns)

    EP3 0.28 (ns)-0.03 (ns) -0.40 (ns) 0.61**

    EP4 0.51* -0.43 (ns) -0.42 (ns) 0.69**

    EP5 0.20 (ns) 0.02 (ns) -0.33 (ns) 0.130 (ns)

    SDS Unextractable

    UP1 0.41 (ns) 0.81*** 0.69** 0.52*

    UP2 0.52* 0.27 (ns) 0.62** 0.69**

    UP3 0.44 (ns) 0.05 (ns) 0.51* 0.66**

    UP4 0.40 (ns) -0.21(ns) 0.32 (ns) 0.61**

    UP5 0.34 (ns) -0.32 (ns) 0.26 (ns) 0.32 (ns)

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    Extractable Protein Percentage (% of Total Protein) Unextractable Protein Percentage (% of Total Protein)

    Sample ID HMWPP LMWPP ω-gliadinα,β and γ

    gliadinAlbumin and

    GlobulinHMWPP LMWPP

    ω-gliadin

    α,β and γgliadin

    Albumin and Globulin

    HRW 13.6 4.44 5.00 31.7 18.1 12.83 3.90 2.13 4.85 3.33Arapahoe 14.4 4.67 5.10 32.8 18.9 10.92 3.59 2.01 4.43 3.07Bulk IWG 16.1 7.42 5.71 33.8 21.1 7.73 1.78 1.05 2.80 2.34IWG L4-1 15.7 8.20 5.89 37.5 21.4 3.77 1.24 0.83 2.90 2.40IWG L4-3 14.9 7.79 5.67 34.4 19.5 5.45 1.93 1.34 5.11 3.72IWG L4-29 15.0 6.66 5.08 35.4 18.9 5.01 1.92 1.36 6.49 4.00IWG L4-32 17.4 7.88 5.80 35.6 22.5 2.94 1.04 0.77 2.94 3.00IWG L4-57 17.9 8.21 6.28 37.5 19.0 3.36 1.18 0.86 3.17 2.46IWG L4-72 17.1 7.94 5.39 33.4 20.5 5.31 1.73 1.13 4.13 3.26IWG L4-84 14.5 6.77 5.24 36.3 17.6 6.40 2.17 1.45 5.85 3.60IWG L4-85 14.9 6.75 5.08 35.9 18.9 5.36 1.95 1.34 5.86 3.81IWG L4-103 16.7 7.87 5.82 33.4 21.9 3.48 1.43 1.09 4.49 3.71IWG L4-105 16.0 7.22 5.46 36.6 21.6 4.27 1.36 0.92 3.49 2.93IWG L4-139 15.8 7.53 5.31 35.5 19.2 4.87 1.91 1.28 5.01 3.46IWG L4-154 15.8 7.98 5.99 37.1 21.4 4.33 1.32 0.87 2.72 2.29IWG L4-157 14.8 7.03 5.57 36.3 21.4 4.16 1.54 1.12 4.66 3.30IWG L4-159 15.5 7.22 5.42 33.4 17.9 5.22 2.20 1.62 7.19 4.13IWG L4-160 16.3 7.63 5.36 36.0 21.7 4.23 1.41 0.93 3.20 2.78IWG L4-172 15.2 7.95 5.76 35.3 21.7 4.28 1.49 1.07 3.77 3.36

    Figure 3: Correlation coefficients (r) of SE-HPLC absorbance area values of SDS-extractable proteins withfarinograph water absorption (A), SE-HPLC absorbance area values of SDS-unextractable proteins withfarinograph peak time (B) and stability (C).

    Table 1. Protein components from extractable and unextractable fractions

    EP, SDS-extractable proteins; UP, SDS-unextractableproteins; 1, HMWPP; 2, LMWPP; 3, ω-gliadins; 4, α, βand γ-gliadins; 5, albumin and globulin** and ***,significance at P < 0.01 and P < 0.001 respectively. ns,not significant at P < 0.05

    Table 2. Correlation coefficients between quality parameters and protein fractions

    Table 3: Molecular identification of extracted gluten proteins by LC-MS/MS

    aGI accession number of the best matched sequence in NCBIbThe percentage of amino acid sequence coverage from uniquepeptides matched to the full-length protein sequences.

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    Figure 1: SE-HPLC chromatograms of IWG and wheat. SDS-extractableproteins (A); SDS-unextractable proteins (B)

    A B

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    Figure 2: Correlation coefficients (r) of SE-HPLCabsorbance area values of SDS-unextractableproteins with dough extensibility (A) and flourprotein content (B)

    A

    B

    A B CF1, 3.5-5.5 min: HMWPP (High Molecular Weight Polymeric Protein)F2, 5.5-5.9 min: LMWPP (Low Molecular Weight Polymeric Protein)F3, 5.9-6.2 min: ω-gliadinsF4, 6.2-6.9 min: α,β and γ gliadinsF5, 6.9-8.0 min: albumins and globulins

    Slide Number 1