The Effect of Germination on Antinutritional Components, In Vitro Starch and Protein Digestibility, Content, and Bioaccessibility of Phenolics and Antioxidants of Some Pulses

Neşe Yılmaz Tuncel*, Havva Polat Kaya, Fatma Betül Sakarya, Ali Emre Andaç, Fatma Korkmaz, Gulay Ozkan, Necati Barış Tuncel, Esra Capanoglu

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of 24- and 48-h germination on antinutrient levels (phytic acid, trypsin inhibitors, saponins, and tannins), in vitro starch and protein digestibility, and the content and bioaccessibility of phenolic compounds and antioxidants in chickpeas, peas, mung beans, and lentils. Germination resulted in reductions of phytic acid by up to 75.65% and trypsin inhibitor activity by up to 39.20% in the pulses studied. In contrast, saponin levels showed a significant increase, rising nearly threefold with germination, while mung beans exhibited an exceptional 27-fold increase. Tannins decreased in lentils (2.6-fold) and mung beans (5.8-fold), increased in peas (1.6-fold), and remained unchanged in chickpeas following germination. In vitro protein digestibility generally increased with germination, reaching up to 4.40%, except in peas, where a decline was observed. Germination significantly enhanced total digestible starch content while reducing resistant starch in all pulses except chickpeas. Mung beans exhibited the highest total phenolic content and antioxidant capacity, followed by lentils. Although germination significantly elevated total phenolic content in all pulses, this increase did not always align with antioxidant capacity outcomes. Additionally, germination led to a decline in the bioaccessibility of phenolics. However, the amount of phenolic compounds progressively increased during gastric and intestinal digestion, with intestinal digestion further enhancing the total antioxidant capacity of the pulses.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere70103
JournalFood Science and Nutrition
Volume13
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Food Science & Nutrition published by Wiley Periodicals LLC.

Keywords

  • legumes
  • phytic acid
  • saponin
  • sprouting
  • tannin
  • trypsin inhibitors

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