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Wheat gluten peptide miracle and coeliac beast: Solution pathways from a wheat industry perspective By John Williams * & Mark Laucke** *Food & Fibre Supply Chain Institute **Laucke Flour Mills September 2015
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PLANT MILLERS/BAKERS FOOD BREEDERS MANUFACTURERS ISSUE ONE – ADDED GLUTEN PROTEIN Reference: Kasarda USDA (2013) OBJECTIVE: TO IMPROVE RHEOLOGICAL PROPERTIES ESPECIALLY WHEN BRAN AND GRAIN ARE ADDED OR TO INCREASE FOOD FUNCTIONALITY
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RAPID DOUGH NO-TIME DOUGH LESS TIME METHOD METHOD ISSUE TWO – LESS FERMENTATION References: Bauer et al (2003) De Angelis et al (2006) Gobbetti et al (2007) Greco et al (2011) BAKERS’ OBJECTIVE: TO DECREASE TIME & COST
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ISSUE THREE – MORE CONSUMPTION OF NON- FERMENTED WHEAT PRODUCTS Reference: Gerrard et al, 2000 CONSUMER OBJECTIVE: CONSUMERS HAVING LIFESTYLE CHOICES FOR NUTRITIOUS CONVENIENCE FOODS
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ISSUE FOUR – NO TIME/COST MEASUREMENT OF GLUTEN RESIDUES RECOMMENDED FOR INDUSTRY NO COST/TIME RECOMMENDED MEASUREMENT TO TEST GLUTEN RESIDUES IN BREAD & FOOD
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INADEQUATE GLUTEN TOXICITY MUCOSAL VILLI ENZYME DIGESTION IMMUNO-INFLAMMATORYATROPHY COELIAC DISEASE PROBLEM IDENTIFIED – HIGH GLUTEN PEPTIDE RESIDUE
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Medical: Chronic inflammatory coeliac disease or gluten intolerance Coeliac disease is latent with triggering factors (eg inadequate microbia) 40% of Caucasians have gene predisposition No remission has been recorded - chronic 3.5 million European and 2 million US people have coeliac disease Diagnosis is costly and intrusive making un-diagnosis high 22 percent of US consumers were following a gluten-free diet in 2014 _________________________________________________ Market: Flat wheat prices compared to other grains Negative protein grade spreads – penalties for higher protein Less value for protein wheat Grain sorghum prices are often higher than milling wheat prices CONSEQUENCE OF HIGH GLUTEN RESIDUE
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Objectives Secure the integrity of consumer safety for wheat bread Produce a commercially ‘safer’ wheat bread made from gluten flour for non-coeliac consumers Solutions 1. Improve fermentation through new microbia (probiotics) 2. Decrease effective fermentation time using new wheat germination enzymes (prebiotics) 3. Recommend a new gluten measurement test for bakers
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SOLUTION LIMITS: Cannot simply remove wheat proteins (complex gluten peptides - 16,000 fragments) Source of C, N, & S in seed germination Source of C, N, & S in seedling growth Pre-harvest plant protection against disease/pests Post-harvest seed protection against disease/pests __________________________________________________ Visco-elastic-extensibility rheological properties
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SOLUTION LIMITS : Cannot simply remove added gluten Manufactured gluten is important - Reduces dough variability Increases dough consistency Improves dough elasticity when bran/grain are added Has functional properties in food manufacturing
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SOLUTION LIMITS : Cannot stop consumers eating non-fermented wheat products Emphasis on choice Emphasis on lifestyle
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CONCLUSIONS More research required 1. Improve dough fermentation through new microbia (probiotics) 2. Decrease effective dough fermentation time using new wheat germination enzymes (prebiotics) 3. Recommend a gluten residue measurement test for bakers 4. Plant breeders to reduce toxic peptides for food manufacturers Further reading: See Williams & Laucke 2015 article GOOGLE: THE WHEAT GLUTEN PEPTIDE MIRACLE AND COELIAC BEAST
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