1. Effect of sodium, potassium, calcium and magnesium chloride salts on porcine muscle proteases
- Author
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Mónica Armenteros, M-Concepción Aristoy, and Fidel Toldrá
- Subjects
inorganic chemicals ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Sodium ,Methionyl aminopeptidase ,chemistry.chemical_element ,General Chemistry ,Calcium ,Biochemistry ,Chloride ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering ,Dipeptidyl peptidase ,Cathepsin C ,Divalent ,chemistry ,medicine ,Leucyl aminopeptidase ,Food Science ,Biotechnology ,medicine.drug - Abstract
This study is focused on the effect of sodium chloride alternative salts (KCl, MgCl2 and CaCl2) on porcine muscle proteases (cathepsins, dipeptidylpeptidases and aminopeptidases). In general, KCl exerted a very similar effect to NaCl for all the studied enzymes, while the effect of divalent salts (CaCl2 and MgCl2) was more pronounced. Cathepsins, dipeptidyl peptidase III, dipeptidyl peptidase IV and alanyl aminopeptidase activities were strongly inhibited by all the chloride salts especially by divalent ones. Dipeptidyl peptidase II and leucyl aminopeptidase were little affected and methionyl aminopeptidase was only inhibited by divalent salts. Dipeptidyl peptidase I was strongly activated by low concentrations of the chloride salts except NaCl. Arginyl aminopeptidase was activated by NaCl and KCl and low amounts of MgCl2, while CaCl2 showed a strong inhibitory effect. This is very important as these enzymes play important roles in dry-cured meats and their activity is, in general, regulated by sodium chloride. Thus, reductions in the sodium concentration with subsequent increases of other alternative cations may have relevant consequences on enzyme activity that should be taken into account when processing dry-cured meats.
- Published
- 2009
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