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10 Protein Cross-linking in Food – Structure, Applications, Implications for Health and Food Safety 213
N
O O
O CHO
O
Protein backbone
HN
N
R
H 2 N N
N
N
O
R
Protein backbone
(A) (B) Bisarg
N N
(C) Crosspy
O N
N
O
OH
OH
HO
OH
(D)
(E)
N
OH
O
O
H 3 C
N
O O
O
CH 3
CH 3
Figure 10.3.Formation of a melanoidin-type colourants on reaction
of (A) protein-bound lysine with furan-2-aldehyde (Hofmann 1998b);
(B) two protein-bound arginine residues with glyoxal in the presence
of carbonyl compound (Hofmann 1998a); (C) two protein-bound
lysine residues with glycolaldehyde or glyoxal (in the presence of
ascorbate). R, remainder of carbonyl compound (Hofmann et al.
1999); (D) product of reaction of propylamine with glucose (Knerr
et al. 2001); and (E) butylaminammonium acetate with glucose
(Lerche et al. 2003).
Encouragingly, when browning was inhibited, radical formation
was completely blocked.
A model system containing propylamine and glucose was
found to yield a yellow cross-link product under food-processing
conditions (Fig. 10.3D; Knerr et al. 2001); however, this prod-
uct is still to be isolated from foodstuffs. In another model study
undertaken by Lerche et al., reacting butylaminammonium ac-
etate (a protein bound lysine mimic) with glucose resulted in the
formation of a yellow product (Fig. 10.3E); this molecule is also
still to be isolated from foodstuffs (Lerche et al. 2003).
The hypothesis that formation of melanoidins involves reac-
tion of protein with carbohydrate is supported by Brands et al.,
who noted that following dialysis of a casein-sugar (glucose
or fructose) system with 12,000 Da cutoff tubing, around 70%
of the brown-coloured products were present in the retentate
(Brands et al. 2002).
MAILLARD-RELATED CROSS-LINKS
Although not strictly classified under the heading of Maillard
chemistry, animal tissues such as collagen and elastin contain
complex heterocyclic cross-links, formed from the apparently
spontaneous reaction of lysine and derivatives with allysine,
an aldehyde formed from the oxidative deamination of lysine
catalysed by the enzyme lysine oxidase (Feeney and Whitaker
1988). A selection of cross-links that form from this reaction
is outlined in Figure 10.4. The extent to which these cross-
links occur in food has not been well-studied, although their
presence in gelatin has been discussed, along with the presence
of pentosidine in these systems (Cole and Roberts 1996, 1997).
Cross-links Formed via Transglutaminase
Catalysis
An enzyme that has received extensive recent attention for
its ability to cross-link proteins is transglutaminase. Trans-
glutaminase catalyses the acyl-transfer reaction between the
N+
N
H 3 C R^2
N+
OH
OH
H 2 N
CO 2 H
CO 2 H
H 2 N
H 2 N CO 2 H
Hydroxypyridinium
(pyridinoline)
N
H
N CO^2 H
NH 2
NH
OH
HO 2 C
H 2 N
HO 2 C
NH 2
Histidinohydroxylysinonorleucine
Figure 10.4.Trifunctional crosslinks reported to result from the
spontaneous reaction of allysine with lysine (Eyre et al. 1984,
Yamauchi et al. 1987, Brady and Robins 2001).