Publication | Closed Access
Decoding of the Saltiness Enhancement Taste Peptides from the Yeast Extract and Molecular Docking to the Taste Receptor T1R1/T1R3
100
Citations
48
References
2022
Year
Taste PeptidesFlavoromicsFood AnalysisUmami DockingSensory ScienceChemical BiologyYeast ExtractSaltiness Enhancement PeptidesBioanalysisChromatographyBiochemistryTaste Receptor T1r1/t1r3MetabolomicsFood QualityPharmacologyFood ComponentMolecular DockingNatural SciencesPeptide LibraryProtein EngineeringMedicine
The development of saltiness or saltiness enhancement peptides is important to decrease the dietary risk factor of high sodium. Taste peptides in the yeast extract were separated by ultrafiltration and subsequently identified by UPLC-Q-TOF-MS/MS. The 377 identified peptides were placed into the umami receptor T1R1/T1R3. The results showed that eight taste peptides with higher binding energies were screened by molecular virtual docking, and the results revealed that Asp218, Ser276, and Asn150 of T1R1 play key roles in umami docking of peptides. The taste characteristic description and saltiness enhancement effect results suggested that PKLLLLPKP (sourness and umami, 0.18 mM), GGISTGNLN (sourness, 0.59 mM), LVKGGLIP (umami, 0.28 mM), and SSAVK (umami, 0.35 mM) had higher saltiness enhancement effects. The sigmoid curve analysis further confirmed that the taste detection threshold of the GGISTGNLN in the peptide and salt model (157.47 mg/L) was lower than 320.99 mg/L and exhibited a synergistic effect on saltiness perception, whereas SSAVK, PKLLLLPKP, and LVKGGLIP exhibited additive effects on the saltiness perception. This work also corroborated previous research, which indicated that the sourness and umami taste attributes could enhance the saltiness perception.
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