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Food Science

2005

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

Articles 1 - 9 of 9

Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences

Grain Quality Of Brazilian Maize Genotypes As Influenced By Nitrogen Level, Aildson P. Duarte, Stephen C. Mason, David S. Jackson, Jorge De C. Kiehl Aug 2005

Grain Quality Of Brazilian Maize Genotypes As Influenced By Nitrogen Level, Aildson P. Duarte, Stephen C. Mason, David S. Jackson, Jorge De C. Kiehl

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

Maize (Zea mays L.) is an important crop in Brazil, and concerns about grain quality are increasingly important with increasing exports and use of grain for specific end-uses. A wide range of genotypes are grown and N application is required to produce high yields. The objectives of these studies were to: (i) determine N application effects on the kernel hardness and breakage susceptibility of a wide range of Brazilian genotypes ranging from dent to flint kernel types and (ii) determine relationships among kernel hardness and breakage susceptibility tests, yield and N and oil concentration. Three studies were conducted with …


Is The Low Prevalence Of Peanut Allergy In Israel Due To Hypoallergenic Peanut Products?, S. J. Maleki, S. L. Hefle, H. Cheng, Y. Katz, G. Du Toit, G. Lack Feb 2005

Is The Low Prevalence Of Peanut Allergy In Israel Due To Hypoallergenic Peanut Products?, S. J. Maleki, S. L. Hefle, H. Cheng, Y. Katz, G. Du Toit, G. Lack

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

RATIONALE: In Israel the majority of infants less than 12 months old regularly consume peanut products in contrast to the UK where infants avoid peanut products. Previous studies suggest a low prevalence of peanut allergy in Israel and raise the possibility that the processing of Israeli peanut snacks renders them hypoallergenic. Therefore, the allergen content and allergenicity of the most popular peanut products consumed by children and infants in the UK and Israel were compared to determine if such differences could explain the variation in the prevalence of peanut allergy.

METHODS: The total protein content of whole snack products was …


Development Of Laboratory Techniques To Mimic Industrial-Scale Nixtamalization, Roxana Yglesias, Anne M. Parkhurst, David S. Jackson Jan 2005

Development Of Laboratory Techniques To Mimic Industrial-Scale Nixtamalization, Roxana Yglesias, Anne M. Parkhurst, David S. Jackson

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

A laboratory nixtamalization process was developed to imitate larger scale cooking/steeping conditions. Corn (45 kg) was cooked in a pilot plant gas-fired cook/steep tank and temperature was monitored every 30 sec. Cooling and heating rates were mimicked in the laboratory using a digital temperature programmable hot plate that adjusted grain-waterlime temperature changes at a specified rate. A Response Surface Central Composite Design was used to model pasting and thermal properties of nixtamal and masa as a function of cooking temperature (86-96°C), cooking time (20-40 min), and steeping time (3-11.77 hr). Nixtamal and masa moisture. dry matter loss, nixtamal and masa …


Evaluation Of Liquid Nitrogen Freeze Drying And Ethanol Dehydration As Methods To Preserve Partially Cooked Starch And Masa Systems, Roxana Yglesias, David S. Jackson Jan 2005

Evaluation Of Liquid Nitrogen Freeze Drying And Ethanol Dehydration As Methods To Preserve Partially Cooked Starch And Masa Systems, Roxana Yglesias, David S. Jackson

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

Preservation of starch structure/properties. including structures formed during partial or complete cooking, are important when the impact of processing conditions is being studied. Two preservation techniques used to study changes in starch during thermal-mechanical processing are commonly cited in the literature: 1) rapid freezing followed by lyophilization, and 2) a dehydration procedure using alcohols. A comparative determination on how these methods affect various starch structures has not been widely reported. Corn starch samples were collected from the Rapid Visco-Analyser (RVA) at 3 min (swollen granules, 30°C), at the top of the pasting peak (gelatinized granules, 95°C), at the bottom of …


Functionality Behavior Of Raw And Extruded Corn Starch Mixtures, Serap Ozcan, David S. Jackson Jan 2005

Functionality Behavior Of Raw And Extruded Corn Starch Mixtures, Serap Ozcan, David S. Jackson

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

Relationships between the structural properties of raw. and extruded com starches and their functionalities were investigated using mixtures of these starch types. Extruded starch had higher water absorption and water solubility indices, and produced lower RVA viscosity profiles when compared with raw starch. It also had no differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) endotherm. Gel cohesiveness and adhesiveness of both starch types were similar, while extruded starch gels were softer. Extruded starch produced lower Rapid Visco Analyser (RVA) viscosity profiles than raw starch due to starch degradation during extrusion. The raw and extruded starch components bad negative interaction coefficients, thus RVA viscosity …


Ctla-4 Signaling Regulates The Intensity Of Hypersensitivity Responses To Food Antigens, But Is Not Decisive In The Induction Of Sensitization, Femke Van Wijk, Sanne Hoeks, Stefan Nierkens, Stef J. Koppelman, Peter Van Kooten, Louis Boon, Leon M.J. Knippels, Raymond Pieters Jan 2005

Ctla-4 Signaling Regulates The Intensity Of Hypersensitivity Responses To Food Antigens, But Is Not Decisive In The Induction Of Sensitization, Femke Van Wijk, Sanne Hoeks, Stefan Nierkens, Stef J. Koppelman, Peter Van Kooten, Louis Boon, Leon M.J. Knippels, Raymond Pieters

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

Although food allergy has emerged as a major health problem, the mechanisms that are decisive in the development of sensitization to dietary Ag remain largely unknown. CTLA-4 signaling negatively regulates immune activation, and may play a crucial role in preventing induction and/or progression of sensitization to food Ag. To elucidate the role of CTLA-4 signaling in responses to food allergens, a murine model of peanut allergy was used. During oral exposure to peanut protein extract (PPE) together with the mucosal adjuvant cholera toxin (CT), which induces peanut allergy, CTLA-4 ligation was prevented using a CTLA-4 mAb. Additionally, the effect of …


Periplasm Organization In Treponema Denticola As Studied By Cryo-Electron Tomography, Jacques Izard, C.-E. Hsieh, C. A. Mannella, Ronald J. Limberger, M. Marko Jan 2005

Periplasm Organization In Treponema Denticola As Studied By Cryo-Electron Tomography, Jacques Izard, C.-E. Hsieh, C. A. Mannella, Ronald J. Limberger, M. Marko

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

As a spirochete, the genus Treponema is one of the few major bacterial groups whose natural phylogenic relationships are evident at the level of gross phenotypic characteristics such as their morphology. Treponema spp. are highly invasive due to their unique motility in dense media, and their ability to penetrate cell layers [1]. This feature is associated with the helical cell body and the presence of flagellar filaments in the periplasm [2]. Treponema denticola is an oral pathogen involved in endodontic infections and periodontal diseases. The presence and quantity of T. denticola in the subgingival biofilm is correlated with the severity …


Etiology Of Oral Disease In View Of Microbial Complexity, Anne C.R. Tanner, Jacques Izard Jan 2005

Etiology Of Oral Disease In View Of Microbial Complexity, Anne C.R. Tanner, Jacques Izard

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

The number of different microorganisms recognized in the oral cavity using molecular methods has more than doubled compared with the number isolated using cultural techniques. This finding necessitates a reevaluation of which species may be pathogens in dental infections. Molecular methods used to determine microbial diversity include broad range target Polymerase Chain Reaction with ‘universal primers’, and cloning amplicons or denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis to separate DNA fragments before sequencing. These molecular methods have clarified and expanded the taxonomy of oral microbial species. Discrepancies between comprehensive molecular and cultural methods suggest that neither method alone can adequately evaluate associations of …


Functional Consequences Of Genome Evolution In Listeria Monocytogenes: The Lmo0423 And Lmo0422 Genes Encode ΣC And Lstr, A Lineage Ii-Specific Heat Shock System, Chaomei Zhang, Joseph Nietfeldt, Min Zhang, Andrew K. Benson Jan 2005

Functional Consequences Of Genome Evolution In Listeria Monocytogenes: The Lmo0423 And Lmo0422 Genes Encode ΣC And Lstr, A Lineage Ii-Specific Heat Shock System, Chaomei Zhang, Joseph Nietfeldt, Min Zhang, Andrew K. Benson

Department of Food Science and Technology: Faculty Publications

Listeria monocytogenes strains belonging to phylogenetic lineage II (serotypes 1/2a, 1/2c, and 3a) carry a lineage-specific genome segment encoding a putative sigma subunit of RNA polymerase (lmo0423, herein referred to as sigC), a gene of unknown function (lmo0422) similar to the padR family of regulators, and a gene that is similar to the rodA-ftsW family of cell wall morphology genes (lmo0421). To understand the function of this set of genes, their expression patterns and the effects of null mutations in the lineage II L. monocytogenes strain 10403S were examined. The data are consistent with the three genes comprising an …