## Abstract The impact of a range of variables on the foaming properties of hordein‐ and albumin‐derived fractions from barley has been investigated. When foamed using nitrogen, the hordein‐derived polypeptides produce the most stable foams. However, when carbon dioxide was the foaming agent, the p
Immunological characterisation of barley polypeptides in lager foam
✍ Scribed by Juliet A Kauffman; E N Clare Mills; Gary M Brett; Roger J Fido; Arthur S Tatham; Peter R Shewry; Akiko Onishi; Michael O Proudlove; Michael R A Morgan
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1994
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 898 KB
- Volume
- 66
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-5142
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Eight monoclonal antibodies (mAb) recognising barley polypeptides have been identified from a library developed to wheat prolamins. The specificity or the mAb has been determined using enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and immunoblotting. Six were of broad specificity, recognising D, B, C and γ‐hordeins to varying degrees by both techniques. IFRN 0610 preferentially recognised γ‐hordeins by ELISA but was highly specific for this hordein group by immunoblotting. Another mAb, IFRN 0624, bound to a M~r~ ∽ 18000 polypeptide belonging to the CM protein (trypsin/α‐amylase inhibitor) family by immunoblotting. This, or a related protein, was detected by 0624 in all hordein fractions using ELISA. These mAb, together with two others described previously and found to recognise the repeat motif of C hordein, were used in ELISA and immunoblot analysis of Octyl‐Sepharose fractions of lager foam. Hordein polypeptides were found in all foam fractions, indicating that much foam protein originates from the malt. The CM‐like protein was found present in a virtually unmodified form. In contrast, the repeat motif of C hordein was not detected, indicating that it had either been destroyed or masked by other beer constituents. The foam stabilising agent, propylene glycol alginate (PGA), increased the apparent hydrophobicity of hordein fragments suggesting that at least part of the activity of PGA is mediated by interactions with the hordein components of foam.
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