1 / 1

Acknowledgements

Content of lunasin in grain of different cereal species. R. Muceniece 1 , I.Kirhnere 3 , I.Nakurte 2 , A.Kronberga 3 , A.Kokare 3 , V.Strazdina 4 , Z.Vicupe 4 , M.Bleidere 4 , L.Legzdina 3 1 Faculty of Medicine, University of Latvia 2 Faculty of Biology , University of Latvia

Download Presentation

Acknowledgements

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Content of lunasin in grain of different cereal species R. Muceniece1, I.Kirhnere3, I.Nakurte2, A.Kronberga3, A.Kokare3, V.Strazdina4, Z.Vicupe4, M.Bleidere4,L.Legzdina3 1 Faculty of Medicine, University of Latvia 2Faculty of Biology, University of Latvia 3State Priekuli PlantBreedingInstitute, Latvia 4State Stende CerealsBreedingInstitute, Latvia Introduction Lunasin is a novel, cancer-preventive, anti-inflammatory and cholesterol-reducing 43-amino-acid peptide that was originally isolated from soy and is also found in barley, rye and wheat. Obtained bioavailability and thermostability of lunasin after oral administration indicate the reasons for recommending the inclusion of lunasin-containing products in the human diet. Purpose of this study was to compare content of lunasin in different cereal species as well as to evaluate lunasin level in barley grown in organic and conventional farming systems. Additionally, we searched for new lunasin-containing cereals. • Results • Triticale was the most lunasin-rich cereal, displaying the lunasin content from 0.42 to 6.46 mg g-1 of grain (breeding lines 0006-31 and 0002-26, respectively). • The highest lunasin content found in rye was 1.51 mg g-1 in variety ‘DankovskeDiament‘, and in winter wheat - 0.23 mg g-1 (variety ‘Fredis‘). • Oat variety ‘Ivory’ contained the highest lunasin level of tested oat genotypes (0.197 mg g-1). • Measuring the lunasin content in organically and conventionally grown spring barley, we observed the average level 0.039 and range 0.004 – 0.169 mg g-1. The highest lunasin content was found in variety ‘Rubiola’ under organic growing conditions (0.169 mg g-1), but the highest average level under both growing systems was in breeding line PR-4121 (0.14 mg g-1). The effect of genotype and growing environment was significant (p<0.01). • Material and Methods • Lunasin was detected using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and mass spectrometry tandem analysis. • Sample preparations involved extraction of the lunasin with a protease inhibitors, liquid-liquid extraction and solid-phase extraction procedure • Grain yield harvested in 2010 was used for analysis • Oat(Avena sativa L): hulled oat varieties ‘Laima’, ‘Arta’, ‘StendesLiva’ (bred in Latvia), ‘Ivory’ (Germany) and naked breeding line ‘S-156’ (Latvia) • Spring barley (Hordeumvulgare L.): Latvian varieties (Rubiola, Abava, Idumeja, Rasa, Irbe), foreign varieties (Anni, Dziugiai, Primus, Annabell, Vienna) and breeding lines • Winter rye (Secalecereale): Polish varieties ‘Gradan’ F1, ‘Walet’, ‘Amilo’, ‘DankowkiDiament’ and ‘Kaupo’ (Latvia) • Winter triticale (X Triticosecale Witt.): Polish variety ‘Dinaro’, line SGU 10/94 (Czech Republic), and four breeding lines selected in State Priekuli Plant Breeding Institute (Latvia) . Table. Materialusedfortesting Figure. Min, maxandaveragevaluesoflunasincontentincerealgrain. • Conclusion • We report first data of lunasin content in cereal genotypes grown in Northern Europe;previously published data on lunasin in cereals were obtained in genotypes grown in Korea • We report the first discovery of lunasin in triticale and oats • The detection of lunasin complements a list of bioactive compounds present in the cereals and strengthens recommendations to use their products as functional foods. Acknowledgements This study was performed with financial support of European Social Fund co-financed project 2009/0218/1DP/1.1.1.2.0/09/APIA/VIAA/099.

More Related