Food Biochemistry and Food Processing (2 edition)

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664 Part 5: Fruits, Vegetables, and Cereals

peptide bonds somewhere along the protein chain, whereas ex-
oproteases attack the ends of the protein chain and remove one
amino acid at a time. The latter are called carboxypeptidases
when acting from the carboxy terminus or aminopeptidases
when acting from the amino terminus. Based on the chemistry
of their catalytic mechanism, proteases have been classified into
four groups: serine (E.C. 3.4.21), metallo- (E.C. 3.4.24), aspartic
(E.C. 3.4.23), and cysteine (E.C. 3.4.22) proteases.
Nowak and Mierzwinska (1978) reported the presence of
endopeptidase, carboxypeptidase, and aminopeptidase activi-
ties in the embryo and endosperm of rye seeds. Endoprote-
olytic, exoproteolytic, carboxypeptidase, aminopeptidase, and
N-α-benzoylarginine-p-nitroanilide (BAPA) hydrolyzing activ-
ities have also been found in whole meal extracts from ungermi-
nated rye seeds by Brijs et al. (1999). During germination, pro-
teolytic activity increases during the first 3 days to then remain
constant (Brijs et al. 2002). Milling fractions of germinated rye
(Brijs et al. 2002) have much higher proteolytic activities than
those of ungerminated rye (Brijs et al. 1999). The enzymes are
mainly present in the bran and shorts fractions. Ungerminated
rye mainly contains two classes of proteases (serine and aspartic
proteases) (Brijs et al. 1999), whereas all four protease classes
are present during germination (Brijs et al. 2002). Germinated
rye contains mainly aspartic and cysteine protease activities;
serine and metalloproteases are less abundant.
Aspartic proteases have been purified from bran of unger-
minated rye (Brijs 2001). Two heterodimeric aspartic proteases
were found: a larger 48 k enzyme, consisting of 32 k and 16 k
subunits which are probably linked by disulphide bridges and a
smaller one of 40 k, consisting of two noncovalently bound 29 k
and 11 k subunits. Both proteins have isoelectric points close
to pI 4.6. Rye aspartic proteases show optimal activity around
pH 3.0 and 45◦C and can be completely inhibited by pepstatin
A (Brijs 2001). Amino acid sequence alignment showed that
the rye aspartic proteases resemble those from wheat (Bleukx
et al. 1998) and barley (Sarkkinen et al. 1992). Cysteine pro-
teases were isolated from the starchy endosperm of 3-day ger-
minated rye (Brijs 2001). SDS-PAGE revealed three protein
bands with apparent molecular weights of 67 k, 43 k, and 30 k,
although it was not established that all three protein bands are
cysteine proteases. The rye cysteine proteases are optimally ac-
tive around pH 4.0 and at 45◦C and can be totally inhibited
by l-transepoxysuccinyl-l leucylamido-(4-guanidino)butane
(or E-64).
Protease inhibitors can reduce the activity of proteases and
have also been found in rye. Boisen (1983) and Lyons et al.
(1987) isolated a trypsin inhibitor from rye endosperm and rye
seed, respectively. The inhibitor had a molecular weight of about
12 to 14 k, contained four disulphide bridges, and was resistant
to trypsin and elastase but was completely inactivated by chy-
motrypsin. The amino acid composition was very similar to that
of the barley and wheat trypsin inhibitors.
Mosolov and Shul’gin (1986) purified a subtilisin inhibitor
from rye that belongs to the Kunitz-type inhibitor family. The
inhibitor consisted of two forms with pI values of 6.8 and 7.1
and had a molecular weight of about 20 k. It inhibited subtilisin
(at a molar ration of 1:1) and fungal proteinases from the genus

Aspergillus, but was inactive against trypsin, chymotrypsin, and
pancreatic elastase. The amino acid composition of the rye sub-
tilisin inhibitor was similar to that from its wheat and barley
counterparts.
Hejgaard (2001) purified and characterized six serine protease
inhibitors, also called “serpins,” from rye grain. The serpins each
have different regulatory functions based on different reactive
center loop sequences, allowing for specific associations with the
substrate-binding subsites of the proteases. The reactive center
loops of the rye serpins were similar to those of wheat serpins.
Five of the six serpins contained one or two glutamine residues at
the reactive center bond, which were differently positioned than
in the wheat reactive center loops. The rye serpins have a molec-
ular weight of 43 k and inhibit proteases with chymotrypsin-like
specificity, but not pancreatic elastase or proteases with trypsin-
like specificity.

Protein Physicochemical Properties

The properties of rye proteins, for example, their foam-forming
and emulsifying capacities, have hitherto not been studied well.
Ludwig and Ludwig (1989) isolated a protein mixture from rye
flour that exhibited low foam stability but excellent emulsifying
properties at pH 3.5. Meuser et al. (2001) reported on a rye water-
soluble protein with foam-forming capacity. It had a molecular
weight of 12.3 k and an isoelectric point of 5.97. The optimum
pH value for the water-soluble rye protein to form stable foam
was pH 6.0. The protein did not appear to be located in spe-
cific morphological parts of the rye kernel. Wannerberger et al.
(1997) found that secalins are more surface-active than gliadins.
The lower molecular weight secalins spread more rapidly at the
air-water interface, resulting in a higher surface pressure, than
did the higher molecular weight gliadins. The surface pressure
developed by both secalin and gliadin decreased with decreasing
pH. Different rye milling fractions showed differences in surface
behavior in relation to their protein content. The milling fraction
with the highest protein content spread fastest and reached the
highest surface pressure value.

RYE PROCESSING


While rye processing has gained interest because of its perceived
positive health effects (Poutanen 1997), the functional properties
of the rye major constituents limit the processing performance
of rye in industrial processes (Weipert 1997). Milling and bread
making are the most common processes in rye grain processing
for human consumption.

Rye Milling

The objective of milling is to separate the bran and the germ from
the starchy endosperm and to reduce the starchy endosperm in
size, in order to obtain a refined product, that is, flour. Rye
milling differs somewhat from wheat milling. Rye kernels are
smaller than wheat kernels, and the separation of the endosperm
from the bran is poorer in rye than in wheat (Nyman et al. 1984).
The extraction rate of rye flour is lower than that of wheat flour,
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