Foods (Sep 2023)

Processing-Induced Markers in Proteins of Commercial Plant-Based Drinks in Relation to Compositional Aspects

  • Ida Schwartz Roland,
  • Miguel Aguilera-Toro,
  • Søren Drud-Heydary Nielsen,
  • Nina Aagaard Poulsen,
  • Lotte Bach Larsen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods12173282
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 17
p. 3282

Abstract

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The consumption of plant-based drinks is increasing, but they represent a product category normally with lower protein content as compared with bovine milk. Furthermore, the products are highly processed and, therefore, the proteins in this product category may carry a significant processing history. In the present study, a series of 17 freshly produced, commercially available plant-based drinks were benchmarked according to protein-quality parameters. The plant-based drinks represented different plant sources, as well as some mixed products, and were investigated relative to composition, aggregate sizes, presence of non-reducible proteins complexes, and level of processing-induced markers in the proteins. Processing-induced changes in the proteins were determined by a newly developed cocktail method, determining markers related to Maillard and dehydroalanine pathways, as well as intact lysine by triple quadrupole-multiple reaction monitoring-mass spectrometry. It was found that all drinks contained non-reducible protein complexes, but specifically, oat-based drinks represented the largest span contents of processing-induced markers within the proteins, which may relate to their inherent processing histories. Furthermore, it was shown that in products containing added sugar, Maillard reaction-related processing markers were increased over the dehydroalanine pathway.

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