Free asparagine in cereals is known to be the precursor of acrylamide, a neurotoxic and carcinogenic product formed during cooking processes. Thus, the development of crops with lower asparagine is of considerable interest to growers and the food industry. In this study, we describe the development and application of a rapid H-1-NMR-based analysis of cereal flour, that is, suitable for quantifying asparagine levels, and hence acrylamide-forming potential, across large numbers of samples. The screen was applied to flour samples from 150 bread wheats grown at a single site in 2005, providing the largest sample set to date. Additionally, screening of 26 selected cultivars grown for two further years in the same location and in three additional...
Acrylamide is a neurotoxin and probable carcinogen formed as a processing contam-inant during baking...
Since the discovery of acrylamide in food and the identification of free asparagine as the key deter...
The amino acid asparagine is considered the rate limiting precursor in the formation of acrylamide i...
Free asparagine in cereals is known to be the precursor of acrylamide, a neurotoxic and carcinogenic...
Acrylamide, a suspected human carcinogen, is generated during food processing at high temperatures i...
Acrylamide, a suspected human carcinogen, is generated during food processing at high temperatures i...
Acrylamide is a Class 2a carcinogen that was discovered in a variety of popular foods, including bak...
Understanding of the contribution of environmental and genetic factors on the chemical composition o...
Acrylamide formation in cooked food has become a significant problem for the food industry. This stu...
Free asparagine concentration, which is the determining factor for acrylamide-forming potential in c...
Plant stress and poor crop management strategies compromise the foundations of food security: crop y...
This study investigated the impact of organically grown cereals on the level of free asparagine (Asn...
Acrylamide forms from free asparagine and reducing sugars during cooking, with asparagine concentrat...
Acrylamide forms from free asparagine and reducing sugars during cooking, with asparagine concentrat...
Acrylamide (C3H5NO) is a food processing contaminant that has been classed as a probable (Group 2a) ...
Acrylamide is a neurotoxin and probable carcinogen formed as a processing contam-inant during baking...
Since the discovery of acrylamide in food and the identification of free asparagine as the key deter...
The amino acid asparagine is considered the rate limiting precursor in the formation of acrylamide i...
Free asparagine in cereals is known to be the precursor of acrylamide, a neurotoxic and carcinogenic...
Acrylamide, a suspected human carcinogen, is generated during food processing at high temperatures i...
Acrylamide, a suspected human carcinogen, is generated during food processing at high temperatures i...
Acrylamide is a Class 2a carcinogen that was discovered in a variety of popular foods, including bak...
Understanding of the contribution of environmental and genetic factors on the chemical composition o...
Acrylamide formation in cooked food has become a significant problem for the food industry. This stu...
Free asparagine concentration, which is the determining factor for acrylamide-forming potential in c...
Plant stress and poor crop management strategies compromise the foundations of food security: crop y...
This study investigated the impact of organically grown cereals on the level of free asparagine (Asn...
Acrylamide forms from free asparagine and reducing sugars during cooking, with asparagine concentrat...
Acrylamide forms from free asparagine and reducing sugars during cooking, with asparagine concentrat...
Acrylamide (C3H5NO) is a food processing contaminant that has been classed as a probable (Group 2a) ...
Acrylamide is a neurotoxin and probable carcinogen formed as a processing contam-inant during baking...
Since the discovery of acrylamide in food and the identification of free asparagine as the key deter...
The amino acid asparagine is considered the rate limiting precursor in the formation of acrylamide i...