Measuring Protein Content in Food: An Overview of Methods
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References
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Protein Quantification Method | Advantages | Disadvantages | References |
---|---|---|---|
Kjeldahl method—digestion of food with a strong acid so that nitrogen is released which is then quantified using a titration technique. | Considered the standard method globally and therefore easy to compare results with other laboratories | Does not measure true protein and overestimations of protein can result due to use of standard nitrogen correction factor 6.25 | [7,11] |
Dumas method | Fast and does not use chemicals; can measure several samples at a time | Costly to set up and is not very accurate as it does not measure true protein. | [7,12] |
UV spectroscopy methods | Simple, does not require any assay agents | Highly error prone due to other compounds that absorb at the selected absorbance wavelength (280 nm) | [7,13] |
Biuret methods—protein–copper chelation and secondary detection of reduced copper, includes the bicinchoninic acid (BCA) and Lowry assay methods | Less protein–protein variation than the Coomassie dye-based assays; compatible with most surfactants used for protein extraction | Incompatible with copper-reducing surfactants and reducing agents including DTT | [7,14] |
Bradford Coomassie Blue assay method—protein–dye binding and direct detection of the color change | Fast, performed at room temperature, compatible with most solvents | High protein–protein variation; incompatible with detergents | [7,15] |
Fluorescent dye methods—protein–dye binding and direct detection of increase in fluorescence associated with the bound dye includes the Qubit assay and EZQ TM assay | Very sensitive and uses less protein | Requires a fluorescence detector | [7,16] |
Direct amino acid analysis using hydrolysis and HPLC quantification | Accurate | Initial investment in HPLC equipment required; hydrolysis step required; time consuming | [7,17] |
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Hayes, M. Measuring Protein Content in Food: An Overview of Methods. Foods 2020, 9, 1340. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9101340
Hayes M. Measuring Protein Content in Food: An Overview of Methods. Foods. 2020; 9(10):1340. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9101340
Chicago/Turabian StyleHayes, Maria. 2020. "Measuring Protein Content in Food: An Overview of Methods" Foods 9, no. 10: 1340. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9101340
APA StyleHayes, M. (2020). Measuring Protein Content in Food: An Overview of Methods. Foods, 9(10), 1340. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9101340