Substantial depletion of vicine, levodopa, and tyramine in a fava bean protein-based nutritional product

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Abstract

A commercial fava bean protein isolate and a liquid nutritional product formulated with it were tested by validated HPLC methods for the favism-associated pyrimidine glycoside vicine, the dopamine precursor levodopa, and the biogenic amine tyramine. The vicine, levodopa, and tyramine concentrations in the protein isolate-306, 13.3, and <0.5 mg/kg, respectively-when expressed on a protein basis-34, 1.5, and <0.06 mg/100 g protein, respectively-were at least 96% lower than the vicine, levodopa, and tyramine (protein-based) concentrations reported for fava beans (=900, ~200, and ~4 mg/100 g protein, respectively). This was also true for the vicine (13 mg/kg or 22 mg/100 g protein), levodopa (=0.17 mg/kg or =0.3 mg/100 g protein), and tyramine (0.08 mg/kg or 0.14 mg/100 g protein) concentrations in the nutritional product. On the basis of these data, one serving (11 fl. oz.) of the nutritional product would deliver approximately 5 mg of vicine, <1 mg of levodopa, and <0.1 mg of tyramine.

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Johns, P. W., & Hertzler, S. R. (2021). Substantial depletion of vicine, levodopa, and tyramine in a fava bean protein-based nutritional product. International Journal of Food Science, 2021. https://doi.org/10.1155/2021/6669544

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