PDCAAS: LDP 2022 using Biochemical methods
Overview
Estimate the Amino Acid Scores for 18 proteins based on their percent composition on a dry basis.
Determine the in vitro protein digestibility (IVPD) of lentil samples for which the amino acid scores have already been estimated.
Calculate the in vitro–protein digestibility corrected amino acid score (IV–PDCAAS) and in vitro–digestible indispensable amino acid score (IV–DIAAS) for these lentil samples.
The experiment aims to calculate the in vitro–protein digestibility corrected amino acid score (IV–PDCAAS) and in vitro–digestible indispensable amino acid score (IV–DIAAS) for specific lentil cultivars. This will be done by using previously determined percent composition on a dry matter basis of specific amino acids in Lentil cultivars to estimate the amino acid scores. We will then determine the in vitro protein digestibility (IVPD) of these same samples by using existing methodology by Hsu et al. (1977) with minor modifications (Tinus et al., 2012). This will allow us to calculate both IV–PDCAAS and IV–DIAAS. The lentil samples being used are a subset of the AGILE Lentil Diversity Panel (LDP). This will allows us to compare the IV–PDCAAS and IV–DIAAS over the range of diverse material and determine if there are cultivar-specific differences.
Germplasm
Germplasm Genus |
Lens
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Germplasm Scientific Name |
Lens culinaris
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Germplasm Collection |
AGILE Lentil Diversity Panel
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Phenomics
- In vitro–protein digestibility corrected amino acid score (IV–PDCAAS)
- In vitro–digestible indispensable amino acid score (IV–DIAAS)
- In vitro protein digestibility (IVPD)
The amino acid compositions of the lentil samples were used to estimate the Amino Acid Score (AAS) as [mg of amino acid in 1 g of test protein/mg of amino acid in requirement pattern]×100 (FAO/WHO, 1991). Different age-categories scoring patterns were used: (a) pre-school children (2 to 5 years) (FAO/WHO, 1991); (b) infants (birth to 6 months), (c) young children (6 months to 3 years), and (d) older children, adolescents, and adults (FAO/WHO, 2013). The lowest AAS calculated reflects the first-limiting amino acid in the protein source and is used to establish the overall score (FAO/WHO, 1991).
The method by Hsu et al. (1977) with minor modifications (Tinus et al., 2012) was used to determine the In vitro protein digestibility (IVPD) of a subset of lentil samples (a total of 40 samples, randomly picked from each quartile of protein content). The protein suspension (6.25 mg protein/mL distilled water) was adjusted to pH 8.0 with 0.1 N NaOH or 0.1 M HCl while stirring at 37 °C. An enzyme mix containing 1.6 mg of trypsin, 3.1 mg of α-chymotrypsin, and 1.3 mg of peptidase per mL was maintained in an ice-bath and adjusted to pH 8.0. The enzymatic solution was added to the protein solution at a 1:10 v/v ratio and stirred at 37 ºC. The pH mixture was measured after 10 min using a pH meter. IVPD is a percentage of digestible protein, estimated according to pH variation after 10 min.
The lowest AAS is used for the calculation of In vitro–protein digestibility corrected amino acid score (IV–PDCAAS) as a product of the AAS and IVPD values for each sample evaluated, using FAO/WHO (1991) scoring patterns for pre-school children (2 to 5 years). The in vitro–digestible indispensable amino acid score (IV–DIAAS) was also calculated as a product of the IVPD and AAS for the first-limiting amino acid, using different FAO/WHO (2013) scoring patterns for infants (birth to 6 months), young children (6 months to 3 years), and older children, adolescents, and adults.
Experimental Design
Biochemical Technique |
Multi-enzyme technique for estimating protein digestibility (Hsu et al., 1977) with minor modifications (Tinus et al., 2012)
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Attribution
Researchers
Data Custodian |
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Data Curator |