Beer consumption and changes in stability of human serum proteins

Author

Gorinstein, Shela

Caspi, Abraham

Goshev, Ivan

Moncheva, Snejana

Zemser, Marina

Weisz, Moshe

Libman, Imanuel

Lerner, Henry Tzvi

Trakhtenberg, Simon

Martín Belloso, Olga

Publication date

2015-10-27T09:52:29Z

2025-01-01

2001

2015-10-27T09:52:29Z



Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of beer consumption (BC) on the functional and structural properties of human serum proteins (HSP). Thirty-eight volunteers (after coronary bypass) were divided into two groups: experimental (EG) and control (CG). Nineteen volunteers of the EG consumed 330 mL per day of beer (about 20 g of alcohol) for 30 consecutive days. The CG volunteers consumed mineral water instead of beer. Blood samples were collected from EG and CG patients before and after the experiment. Albumin (Alb), globulin (Glo), and methanol-precipitable proteins (MPP) from human serum were denatured with 8 M urea. Fluorescence and electrophoresis were employed in order to elucidate urea-induced conformational changes and structural behavior of proteins. The measured fluorescence emission spectra were used to estimate the stability of native and denatured protein fractions before and after BC. It was found that before BC the fractions most stable to urea denaturation were Glo, Alb, and MPP fractions. After BC in most of the beer-consuming patients (EG) some changes in native and denatured protein fractions were detected: a tendency to lower stability and minor structural deviations. These qualitative changes were more profound in MPP than in Alb and Glo. Thus, Glo is more resistible to alcohol influence than Alb, which in turn is more resistible than MPP. No serum protein changes were detected in patients of CG.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

Cervesa; Proteïnes en nutrició humana; Electroforesi; Fluorescència; Beer; Proteins in human nutrition; Electrophoresis; Fluorescence

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1021/jf001262n

Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2001, vol. 49, num. 3, p. 1441-1445

Rights

(c) American Chemical Society, 2001

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