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Taste-Active Dipeptides from Hydrolyzed Mushroom Protein Enhance Saltiness.

Andrew MooreCurtis R LuckettJohn P Munafo
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2021)
An activity-guided fractionation approach applied to thermally treated, enzymatically hydrolyzed mushroom, Agaricus bisporus L., protein led to the identification of several saltiness- and kokumi-enhancing peptides. The identification was accomplished by employing a combination of solid-phase extraction (SPE), gel-permeation chromatography (GPC), and semipreparative reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography (RP-HPLC), coupled with sensory analysis. As a result, this study led to the identification of a collection of common mushroom derived tastants, including 5'-mononucleotides and free amino acids, along with several taste-modulating pyroglutamyl dipeptides, including pyroglutamylcysteine (pGlu-Cys), pyroglutamylvaline (pGlu-Val), pyroglutamylaspartic acid (pGlu-Asp), pyroglutamylglutamic acid (pGlu-Glu), and pyroglutamylproline (pGlu-Pro). The taste-modulating thresholds for the pyroglutamyl dipeptides were calculated in a model mushroom broth containing natural concentrations of guanosine 5'-monophosphate and 14 amino acids, all with dose-over-threshold (DoT) factors ≥1. Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) was employed to quantitate the pyroglutamyl dipeptides, and their concentrations ranged from 2 to 58 μmol/L; however, they were determined to be present in the hydrolysate below their individual taste-modulating thresholds. Despite being present below their individual thresholds, when the dipeptides were collectively added to a model mushroom broth at their natural concentrations (143 μmol/L combined), both salty (p = 0.0061) and kokumi (p = 0.0025) taste attributes were significantly enhanced, demonstrating a synergistic subthreshold taste-modulating effect. This study lays the groundwork for future investigations on the saltiness-enhancing potential of mixtures of subthreshold levels of pyroglutamyl dipeptides found in mushrooms and other sources.
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