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Plant-based meat substitutes and their nutritional composition : A study on iron content, zinc content, calcium content and protein quality in meatballs and plant-based substitutes and how they contribute to the goal of reaching recommended daily intakesThyrén, Linnea January 2020 (has links)
The purpose of this thesis was to study similarities and differences between a meat product and its plant-based substitutes in terms of how they enable people to reach the recommended daily intakes (RDI). The meat product included in the study were meatballs and its substitutes were three different plant-based alternatives. One was mainly based on soy, one on pea protein and one consisted of several different vegetables. The parameters studied were iron, zinc and calcium content as well as protein quality. By analyzing the four different products with flame atomic absorption spectroscopy (FAAS), the mineral content was calculated and protein quality was determined using amino acid analyzis carried out by the laboratory analysis company ALS. The method used to determine protein quality was DIAAS (Digestible Indispensable Amino Acid Score). Example meals and example days were created to visualize any differences and similarities when the products were put in a wider perspective. The results showed that there were differences between the products when they were compared individually, but that the differences were negligible when the products were included in an example meal or example day. This indicates that the products fulfill comparable dietary requirements and that the plant-based products were good substitutes for the meat product. The soy-based product was the best plant-based alternative when it comes to iron content, calcium content and protein quality. However, the soy product and the remaining substitutes reached recommended intakes for the same parameters when included in example days, which shows that the differences between the products are only present when analyzed individually.
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Isothermal Inactivation Studies of Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella, and Enterococcus faecium NRRL B-2354 in Almond, Peanut, and Sunflower ButtersLiao, Ruo Fen 09 June 2022 (has links)
Vegetative, non-sporeforming foodborne pathogens show notable survival and uncanny thermotolerance in low water activity (aw) foods. Controlled studies on Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., and Enterococcus faecium NRRL B-2354 (a Salmonella surrogate) in a variety of food matrices support thermal process validation studies required to achieve global food safety objectives. In this study, we determined and compared thermal inactivation rates using independent six-strain cocktails of pathogens in three plant-based butters. Direct determinations of decimal reduction times (D-values) for L. monocytogenes, Salmonella, and E. faecium, in corresponding butters were inoculated using peanut oil, almond oil, or sunflower oil. Thermal Death Time (TDT) studies for the organisms were conducted in triplicate. Uniform bagged plant- based butter samples of Salmonella spp. or L. monocytogenes, or E. faecium alone were sandwiched in copper plates immobilized with recessed magnets. Samples underwent rapid heat treatments via water immersion under isothermal conditions ranging from 70°C to 85°C. Bacterial destruction in peanut butter (46% fat, 0.20 aw @ 25°C), almond butter, (50% fat, 0.32 aw @ 25°C), or sunflower butter (56% fat, 0.15 aw @ 25°C) was determined by direct plating. The TDT studies showed Salmonella spp. had consistently higher D-values than L. monocytogenes in all treatments, but pair-wise comparisons found no statistical difference when assessing the thermotolerance of the two pathogens in the individual plant-based butters tested (p > 0.005). These data support Salmonella as the primary pathogen of concern in low water activity foods and show the heat resistance of L. monocytogenes can approximate destruction kinetics observed for Salmonella spp. in low aw matrices. E. faecium exhibited the highest thermotolerance. This further supports the utility of this surrogate for Salmonella spp. and L. monocytogenes in high fat, low-moisture foods similar to the plant-based butters tested. Thermotolerance differences between a dry talc vs. peanut oil-based inoculation procedures in peanut butter were also evaluated. Surprisingly, the oil-based inoculations resulted in lower D- values (p > 0.01) for Salmonella spp. and the surrogate when compared to the dry inoculum.
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Bloom : Thoughts for food— re-thinking the norms of (toxic) consumption and masculinityWaller, Natalie January 2021 (has links)
An exploration of the idea that tangible change could be made in the world when norms are unsettled rather than reinforced or left untouched. Bloom focuses on creating a space for the individual to re-define the outdated, toxic norms surrounding masculinity to explore ‘what men can be’. This is tied into questioning ‘what food can be’ — now and in the future — in relation to the norm of consuming animal food products in western societies. In collaboration with people who have actively reduced their meat consumption or identify as plant based or vegan, I have aspired to use my practice as a visual communicator to illustrate connections and reveal hidden narratives of these individuals who are already challenging these norms as change agents within society. The outcome is the Bloom Box — an interactive box containing their stories visualised with ‘out of the norm’ plant foods.
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Communicating Sustainable Consumption?: How the Environmental Impact of Animal-Based Food Consumption is Expressed by Swedish Environmental Non-Governmental OrganizationsHellberg, Lou January 2018 (has links)
The demand and consumption of food products created by the livestock- and fishing industries, have a major environmental impact, affecting climate change, biodiversity, and ecosystems. Yet, there seems to be a lack of public awareness of the direct impact one’s choice of food has on the environment, which suggests that more effective efforts are needed in order to introduce the concept to consumers. By the influence of a post-humanist perspective, this thesis investigates how the environmental impact of consuming animal-based food is communicated by Swedish environmental non-governmental organizations, and how the organizations are actively working to change consumers’ dietary habits by selecting more sustainable options. The research has focused on the external communication channels of the organizations, where verbiage and imagery have been analyzed in context, by using an analytical perspective of a constructionist view of communication, of where I acknowledge that communication has changed in our digital society. The findings indicated that the organizations are showing clear efforts and willingness of communicating the environmental impact of consuming animal-based food, although these efforts remain quite limited. The promotion of a plant-based diet as a way to help mitigate climate change was also communicated to a fair extent, but the organizations seemed to be privileging the preferences of consumers for animal-based food products over the actual need for them. Given that scientific evidence has shown that human consumption of animal-based food products has a major environmental impact, the overall produced knowledge by the organizations’ communication of consuming such products is still lacking. This suggests that more effective communication efforts are still needed, given the severity of the issue, which requires a drastic social change in eating habits as currently practiced in developed nations, in order to effectively mitigate climate change.
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HAVE: An interactive kitchen garden exploring the design of plant-based interfacesPermild, Victor January 2018 (has links)
As the population of the world increases and cities grow in size, we are faced with remarkable societal problems regarding sustainable food security for the generations to come. In this paper, I present and discuss HAVE (Hydroponic Agricultural Vertical Environment), a research-through-design project that explores the design of an interactive open-source vertical kitchen garden. HAVE is designed as a shareable platform, that aims to lower the barriers of entry of getting started with home gardening, to provide an option for people to play an active role in working towards a more sustainable, resilient society. By simplifying the design of a computer-assisted garden, I present an engaging interactive system that is cheap and easy to build and maintain. With HAVE as a case study, this project also aims to expand upon how plant-based interfaces can be implemented in future design work, and builds upon the topics of calm technology and material computing. As such, this paper discusses the opportunities and challenges of designing plant-based interfaces, also in relation to how people care for and interact with plants. It is my hope, that HAVE may act as a conversation piece that addresses societal challenges regarding future agriculture practices, while contributing to the academic discussion and debate on the topics of plant-based interfaces, design for social innovation, and tangible computing, and the field of interaction design in general.
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Increasing Expression of Hepatitis B Surface Antigen in Maize Through BreedingMiller, Erin Suzanne 01 March 2015 (has links) (PDF)
The hepatitis B virus (HBV) is a common virus, with two billion people infected worldwide. It causes approximately 600,000 deaths each year, despite the availability of an effective vaccine since 1982. Maize as a platform for oral vaccination can supply a heat stable vaccine, which does not require syringes or trained personnel to administer. The Hepatitis B Surface antigen was transformed into maize and this seed was used to evaluate expression levels through the breeding process. The transgene was transferred into two elite maize inbreds by backcrossing. Highest expressing ears were selected each generation until approximately 99% commercial parent was obtained with a single gene coding for the vaccine present. Selected individuals were crossed to create hybrid plants. This work was done to create high expressing high yielding lines that could be used as a plant-based oral vaccine for Hepatitis B.
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Measuring the nutritional quality of local plant-based EUREGIO foodsCeci, Adriana Teresa 24 October 2022 (has links)
In the recent years, the consumer choices have been focused on health-promoting
plant-based food and their preferences are oriented towards regional foodstuff from
local productions. Therefore, an important factor for vegetables grown Trentino-Alto
Adige (Italy) is to point out the added value of alpine farming to evaluate the nutritional
values of farming products. Omics technologies (e.g. genomics, transcriptomics,
proteomics and metabolomics) are aimed at investigating the assessment of different
pools of molecules and how they are translated into the structure, function, and dynamics
of a biological system or systems in order to provide a comprehensive characterization
of a specific organism. Research use the omics techniques to exhaustively understand
the functionality of food components. Several sophisticated chromatographic methods,
spectroscopic techniques and chemometric tools are applied to give an insight into a
comprehensive overview of the intrinsic quality, typicality and regionality of specific
plant-based foods in the present PhD thesis: apples and potatoes. The quality of these
foods is evaluated by quantifying the secondary metabolites to investigate their nutraceutical
values. The aim of this PhD project is to use several analytical techniques (LC-MS,
UV-VIS) that are capable of comprehensively characterizing the food metabolome with
particular emphasis on those components with high nutritional values. The data analysis
and data handling of omics data requires advanced bioinformatic, statistical, and
chemometric tools. Potatoes and apples are chosen as target matrices for these studies
for their relevance in the local economy and for the peculiar chemical composition of particular
interest for their health-promoting proprieties. The information is acquired using
several sophisticated chromatographic and spectroscopic techniques, such as ultra-high
performance liquid chromatography coupled with triple quadrupole mass spectrometry
(UHPLC– MS/MS) and UV/VIS. It is integrated to chemometric approaches (principal
component analysis (PCA), partial least square regression (PLS), and data fusion) to
achieve a comprehensive targeted chemical characterization. The sampling procedures
gathers, in the case of the potatoes study, reference cultivars that may be found in the
common retailers of Trentino/Alto-Adige and different production areas, the apples of
22 cultivars were harvest from the fields of the Laimburg Research Centre (Vadena,
Italy) to guaranty comparability of the obtained data. Our results may be used as solid
foundation for a reliable evaluation of apples and potatoes healthy "potential" value
based on cutting-edge techniques, which are capable of providing comprehensive data
regarding the alpine food quality parameters with high efficiency and reliability
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The Metabolomic-Gut-Clinical Axis of Mankai Plant-Derived Dietary PolyphenolsMeir, Anat Yaskolka, Tuohy, Kieran, von Bergen, Martin, Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa, Heinig, Uwe, Zelicha, Hila, Tsaban, Gal, Rinott, Ehud, Kaplan, Alon, Aharoni, Asaph, Zeibich, Lydia, Chang, Debbie, Dirks, Blake, Diotallevi, Camilla, Arapitsas, Panagiotis, Vrhovsek, Urska, Ceglarek, Uta, Haange, Sven-Bastiaan, Rolle-Kampczyk, Ulrike, Engelmann, Beatrice, Lapidot, Miri, Colt, Monica, Sun, Qi, Shai, Iris 05 May 2023 (has links)
Background: Polyphenols are secondary metabolites produced by plants to defend themselves from environmental stressors. We explored the effect of Wolffia globosa ‘Mankai’, a novel cultivated strain of a polyphenol-rich aquatic plant, on the metabolomic-gut clinical axis in vitro, in-vivo and in a clinical trial. Methods: We used mass-spectrometry-based metabolomics methods from three laboratories to detect Mankai phenolic metabolites and examined predicted functional pathways in a Mankai artificial-gut bioreactor. Plasma and urine polyphenols were assessed among the 294 DIRECT-PLUS 18-month trial participants, comparing the effect of a polyphenol-rich green-Mediterranean diet (+1240 mg/polyphenols/day, provided by Mankai, green tea and walnuts) to a walnuts-enriched (+440 mg/polyphenols/day) Mediterranean diet and a healthy controlled diet. Results: Approximately 200 different phenolic compounds were specifically detected in the Mankai plant. The Mankai-supplemented bioreactor artificial gut displayed a significantly higher relative-abundance of 16S-rRNA bacterial gene sequences encoding for enzymes involved in phenolic compound degradation. In humans, several Mankai-related plasma and urine polyphenols were differentially elevated in the green Mediterranean group compared with the other groups (p < 0.05) after six and 18 months of intervention (e.g., urine hydroxy-phenyl-acetic-acid and urolithin-A; plasma Naringenin and 2,5-diOH-benzoic-acid). Specific polyphenols, such as urolithin-A and 4-ethylphenol, were directly involved with clinical weight-related changes. Conclusions: The Mankai new plant is rich in various unique potent polyphenols, potentially affecting the metabolomic-gut-clinical axis.
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Less Animal-Based Food, Better Weight Status: Associations of the Restriction of Animal-Based Product Intake with Body-Mass-Index, Depressive Symptoms and Personality in the General PopulationMedawar, Evelyn, Enzenbach, Cornelia, Roehr, Susanne, Villringer, Arno, Riedel-Heller, Steffi G., Witte, A. Veronica 20 April 2023 (has links)
Restricting animal-based products from diet may exert beneficial effects on weight status; however, less is known about such a diet and emotional health. Moreover, personality traits, for example high neuroticism, may contribute to restrictive eating habits and potentially confound diet-health associations. We aim to systematically assess if restrictive dietary intake of animal-based products relates to lower weight and higher depressive symptoms, and if differences in personality traits play a significant role. Cross-sectional data from the baseline LIFE-Adult study were collected from 2011–2014 in Leipzig, Germany (n = 8943). Main outcomes of interest were dietary frequency of animal-derived products in the last year measured using a Food Frequency Questionnaire (FFQ), body-mass-index (BMI) (kg/m2), and the Center of Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). Personality traits were assessed in a subsample of n = 7906 using the Five Factor Inventory (NEO-FFI). Higher restriction of animal-based product intake was associated with a lower BMI, but not with depression scores. Personality, i.e., lower extraversion, was related to higher frequency of animal product intake. Moreover, personality traits were significantly associated with depressive symptoms, i.e., higher neuroticism, lower extraversion, lower agreeableness, lower conscientiousness, and with higher BMI. These findings encourage future longitudinal studies to test the efficacy of restricting animal-based products as a preventive and therapeutic strategy for overweight and obesity.
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Wolffia globosa–Mankai Plant-Based Protein Contains Bioactive Vitamin B12 and Is Well Absorbed in HumansSela, Ilan, Yaskolka Meir, Anat, Brandis, Alexander, Krajmalnik-Brown, Rosa, Zeibich, Lydia, Chang, Debbie, Dirks, Blake, Tsaban, Gal, Kaplan, Alon, Rinott, Ehut, Zelicha, Hila, Arinos, Shira, Ceglarek, Uta, Isermann, Berend, Lapidot, Miri, Green, Ralph, Shai, Iris 20 April 2023 (has links)
Background: Rare plants that contain corrinoid compounds mostly comprise cobalamin analogues, which may compete with cobalamin (vitamin B12 (B12)) metabolism. We examined the presence of B12 in a cultivated strain of an aquatic plant: Wolffia globosa (Mankai), and predicted functional pathways using gut-bioreactor, and the effects of long-term Mankai consumption as a partial meat substitute, on serum B12 concentrations. Methods: We used microbiological assay, liquid-chromatography/electrospray-ionization-tandem-mass-spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), and anoxic bioreactors for the B12 experiments. We explored the effect of a green Mediterranean/low-meat diet, containing 100 g of frozen Mankai shake/day, on serum B12 levels during the 18-month DIRECT-PLUS (ID:NCT03020186) weight-loss trial, compared with control and Mediterranean diet groups. Results: The B12 content of Mankai was consistent at different seasons (p = 0.76). Several cobalamin congeners (Hydroxocobalamin(OH-B12); 5-deoxyadenosylcobalamin(Ado-B12); methylcobalamin(Me-B12); cyanocobalamin(CN-B12)) were identified in Mankai extracts, whereas no pseudo B12 was detected. A higher abundance of 16S-rRNA gene amplicon sequences associated with a genome containing a KEGG ortholog involved in microbial B12 metabolism were observed, compared with control bioreactors that lacked Mankai. Following the DIRECT-PLUS intervention (n = 294 participants; retention-rate = 89%; baseline B12 = 420.5 ± 187.8 pg/mL), serum B12 increased by 5.2% in control, 9.9% in Mediterranean, and 15.4% in Mankai-containing green Mediterranean/low-meat diets (p = 0.025 between extreme groups). Conclusions: Mankai plant contains bioactive B12 compounds and could serve as a B12 plant-based food source.
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