Effects of antinutritional factors on protein digestibility and amino acid availability in foods.

Jul 9, 2005Journal of AOAC International

How natural food compounds reduce protein digestion and amino acid use

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Abstract

Protein digestibility in traditional diets from developing countries is considerably lower, ranging from 54-78% compared to 88-94% in typical North American diets.

  • Traditional diets often contain less digestible protein fractions and higher levels of insoluble fiber.
  • Antinutritional factors such as glucosinolates, trypsin inhibitors, and phytates are present in many food and feed products.
  • High levels of dietary trypsin inhibitors can reduce protein and amino acid digestibility by up to 50% in experimental animals.
  • Tannins found in certain cereals and legumes may decrease protein and amino acid digestibility by up to 23%.
  • Phytates in cereals and legumes can reduce protein digestibility by up to 10% when supplemented in animal diets.
  • Older rats show greater susceptibility to the negative effects of antinutritional factors compared to younger rats.

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