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Factors affecting in vitro formation of tannin-protein complexes
Authors:Rider A Perez-Maldonado  Barry W Norton  Graham L Kerven
Abstract:In interaction of condensed tannins from Desmodium intortum and Lotus pedunculatus and tannic acid (hydrolysable tannin) with salivary mucoproteins (from sheep and goats), plant leaf proteins and bovine serum albumin were evaluated. These studies were carried out over a pH range of 2-0-9-0 and different inorganic ion conditions to simulate conditions in which dietary proteins would interact with tannins in a ruminant digestive tract. Insoluble tannin-protein interactions were found at pH 4–5–5–5 for bovine serum albumin and 3–5–5–5 for plant leaf protein. The present study showed that pH alone was not the sole determinant for tannin-protein complex formation, since tannin-protein complexation was found in the pH range 6-0–6-5 when different inorganic ions were added to the solutions. Insoluble complexes were not formed with salivary proteins, although precipitation by tannic acid was achieved at 5°C. This suggests that tannins may form soluble rather than insoluble complexes with salivary proteins. It was concluded that purified F1 leaf protein (the major protei occurring in leaf tissue) ought to be used as the test protein for evaluating tannin-protein interactions for in vitro assay procedures. Using this method it was calculated that 27–43% and 19–40% of available plant protein may interact with condensed tannins from Desmodium intortum and Lotus pedunculatus, respectively.
Keywords:condensed tannin  tannin-protein complex  bovine serum albumin  rumen liquor  soluble plant protein  tannic acid  Desmodium  Lotus
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