Targeting aleurone cells for enhanced protein recovery from wheat bran: Impact on protein functionality and phytate content
Journal article, 2025

Protein extraction from wheat bran is challenging due to its multi-layer and fiber-rich structure. Here, opening aleurone cells, via dry and wet milling, their combination and a novel ultrafine milling, and its effect on wheat bran's protein recovery using the alkaline solubilization/isoelectric precipitation and protein structure, functionality, and phytate content were investigated. Wet milling and ultrafine milling improved protein recovery and purity but only ultrafine milling reduced bran particle size to the aleurone cells and exposed their structure. Despite this, ultrafine milling did not significantly increase protein yield compared to wet milling, which partially opened the aleurone cells, meaning that opening the cells per se is not enough for extracting their protein. Proteins extracted with the aid of ultrafine milling had smaller particle sizes with significantly better water solubility (>2-fold) and rheological properties. Both wet milling and ultrafine milling significantly improved the removal of phytate during the wet fractionation process. Altogether, optimizing milling techniques offers a promising path to enhance accessibility to wheat bran proteins and their quality if carefully fine-tuned but other assistant technologies are necessary for boosting the recovery of the released protein from aleurone cells.

Plant-based protein

Wheat bran

Phytic acid

Side streams

pH-shift method

Author

Helga Guðný Elíasdóttir

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Food and Nutrition Science

Precious Elue Ebube

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Food and Nutrition Science

A. Krona

RISE Research Institutes of Sweden

E. R.Kanishka B. Wijayarathna

University of Borås

Akram Zamani Forooshani

University of Borås

Mehdi Abdollahi

Chalmers, Life Sciences, Food and Nutrition Science

Journal of Cereal Science

0733-5210 (ISSN) 1095-9963 (eISSN)

Vol. 124 104205

Tying blue and green resources via 3D food printing for diverse and sustainable future foods

Formas (2021-02349), 2022-01-01 -- 2025-11-30.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Food Science

DOI

10.1016/j.jcs.2025.104205

More information

Latest update

6/3/2025 9