Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1184624 Food Chemistry 2014 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Barley LTP1 and its lipid-bound isoform LTP1b were purified in five easy steps.•We isolated 88 mg LTP1 and 72 mg LTP1b from 200 g barley at high purity.•Both LTP1 and LTP1b showed temperature and pH stability.•LTP1 showed antiyeast activity, but LTP1b was inactive against brewing yeast.

In beer brewing, brewers worldwide strive to obtain product consistency in terms of flavour, colour and foam. Important proteins contributing to beer foam are lipid transfer proteins (LTPs), in particular LTP1 and its lipid-bound isoform LTP1b, which are known to transport lipids in vivo and prevent lipids from destabilising the beer foam. LTP1 and LTP1b were successfully purified using only five purification steps with a high purified protein yield (160 mg LTP1 and LTP1b from 200 g barley). Circular dichroism of LTP1 and LTP1b confirmed that both proteins are highly tolerant to high temperatures (>90 °C) and are pH stable, particularly at a neutral to a more basic pH. Only LTP1 exhibited antiyeast and thermo-stable lytic activity, while LTP1b was inactive, indicating that the fatty acid moiety compromised the antimicrobial activity of LTP1. This lack in antiyeast activity and the positive foam properties of LTP1b would benefit beer fermentation and quality.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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