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Role of curcumin in the conversion of asparagine into acrylamide during heating.
Amino Acids. 2013 Jun; 44(6):1419-26.AA

Abstract

This study aimed to investigate the ability of curcumin to convert asparagine into acrylamide during heating at different temperatures. Binary and ternary model systems of asparagine-curcumin and asparagine-curcumin-fructose were used to determine the role of curcumin on acrylamide formation in competitive and uncompetitive reaction conditions. The results indicated that curcumin could potentially contribute to acrylamide formation under long-term heating conditions as long as asparagine was present in the medium. The amount of acrylamide formed in the ternary system was slightly higher than in the binary system during heating (p < 0.05), because of the higher concentrations of carbonyl compounds initially available. The kinetic trends were similar in both model systems evidencing that fructose reacted with asparagine more rapidly than curcumin. The data reveal that acrylamide formation in the temperature range of 150-200°C obeys Arrhenius law with activation energy of 79.1 kJ/mole. Data of this work showed the possibility that antioxidants having a carbonyl compound can react directly with ASN leading to acrylamide. The addition of antioxidants to foods may increase the formation of acrylamide upon long-term heating if free sugar concentration is low and ASN concentration is relatively high.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Food Engineering, Food Research Center, Hacettepe University, Beytepe, 06800, Ankara, Turkey.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22143430

Citation

Hamzalıoğlu, Aytül, et al. "Role of Curcumin in the Conversion of Asparagine Into Acrylamide During Heating." Amino Acids, vol. 44, no. 6, 2013, pp. 1419-26.
Hamzalıoğlu A, Mogol BA, Lumaga RB, et al. Role of curcumin in the conversion of asparagine into acrylamide during heating. Amino Acids. 2013;44(6):1419-26.
Hamzalıoğlu, A., Mogol, B. A., Lumaga, R. B., Fogliano, V., & Gökmen, V. (2013). Role of curcumin in the conversion of asparagine into acrylamide during heating. Amino Acids, 44(6), 1419-26. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00726-011-1179-5
Hamzalıoğlu A, et al. Role of Curcumin in the Conversion of Asparagine Into Acrylamide During Heating. Amino Acids. 2013;44(6):1419-26. PubMed PMID: 22143430.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Role of curcumin in the conversion of asparagine into acrylamide during heating. AU - Hamzalıoğlu,Aytül, AU - Mogol,Burçe A, AU - Lumaga,Roberta Barone, AU - Fogliano,Vincenzo, AU - Gökmen,Vural, Y1 - 2011/12/06/ PY - 2011/07/25/received PY - 2011/11/22/accepted PY - 2011/12/7/entrez PY - 2011/12/7/pubmed PY - 2013/12/16/medline SP - 1419 EP - 26 JF - Amino acids JO - Amino Acids VL - 44 IS - 6 N2 - This study aimed to investigate the ability of curcumin to convert asparagine into acrylamide during heating at different temperatures. Binary and ternary model systems of asparagine-curcumin and asparagine-curcumin-fructose were used to determine the role of curcumin on acrylamide formation in competitive and uncompetitive reaction conditions. The results indicated that curcumin could potentially contribute to acrylamide formation under long-term heating conditions as long as asparagine was present in the medium. The amount of acrylamide formed in the ternary system was slightly higher than in the binary system during heating (p < 0.05), because of the higher concentrations of carbonyl compounds initially available. The kinetic trends were similar in both model systems evidencing that fructose reacted with asparagine more rapidly than curcumin. The data reveal that acrylamide formation in the temperature range of 150-200°C obeys Arrhenius law with activation energy of 79.1 kJ/mole. Data of this work showed the possibility that antioxidants having a carbonyl compound can react directly with ASN leading to acrylamide. The addition of antioxidants to foods may increase the formation of acrylamide upon long-term heating if free sugar concentration is low and ASN concentration is relatively high. SN - 1438-2199 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22143430/Role_of_curcumin_in_the_conversion_of_asparagine_into_acrylamide_during_heating_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -