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Effect of rancidity ofLupinus albus protein-concentrate-based diets on food intake and growth of Wistar rats

✍ Scribed by Lamghari, Radia; Villaume, Christian; Pelletier, Xavier; Bau, Hwei Ming; Schwertz, Annie; Nicolas, Jean-Pierre; Mejean, Luc


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
363 KB
Volume
75
Category
Article
ISSN
0022-5142

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✦ Synopsis


The organoleptic properties of a diet are inÑuenced by technological processes and have to be taken into account in food intake studies. The authors studied the food intake suppression associated with rancidity occurring during the storage of diets based on casein or heated or lyophilised lupin protein concentrates, and with or without ascorbic acid supplementation in Ðve groups of 10 weanling Wistar rats for 21 or 26 days. After 15 days of storage, the unsaturated fatty acids were oxidised in heated lupin-protein-based diet without ascorbic acid. Compared to casein, food intake was decreased slightly during the Ðrst 10, 16 or 20 days for, respectively, heated lupin protein diet without ascorbic acid, heated lupin protein diet with ascorbic acid, and lyophilised lupin protein diet with or without ascorbic acid. After these periods, food intake decreased strongly. Body weight gain variations did not exactly follow food intake variations. The storage at 20¡C could induce Ðrst an accumulation of free radicals, which were not detectable in measurement of fatty acids but perceived by rats, and then a fast oxidation of unsaturated fatty acids that increased rancid smell, modiÐed nutritional quality and caused a dramatic decrease of rat food intake. Supplementing ascorbic acid into the diet could diminish the formation of free radicals at the beginning of storage, and consequently could delay food intake decrease.