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Assessment of Protein Nutritional Quality and Effects of Traditional Processes: a Comparison Between Ethiopian Quality Protein Maize and Five Ethiopian Adapted Normal Maize Cultivars

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dc.contributor.author Fufa,Habtamu
dc.contributor.author Akalu,Girma
dc.contributor.author Wondimu,Asrat
dc.contributor.author Taffesse,Samson
dc.contributor.author Gebre,Takele
dc.contributor.author Schlosser,Karla
dc.contributor.author Noetzold,Horst
dc.contributor.author Henle,Thomas
dc.date.accessioned 2022-11-24T10:13:29Z
dc.date.available 2022-11-24T10:13:29Z
dc.date.issued 08/2003
dc.identifier.citation Fufa, Habtamu & Akalu, Girma & Wondimu, Asrat & Taffesse, Samson & Gebre, Takele & Schlosser, Karla & Noetzold, Horst & Henle, Thomas. (2003). Assessment of protein nutritional quality and effects of traditional processes: A Comparison between Ethiopian quality protein maize and five Ethiopian adapted normal maize cultivars. Die Nahrung
dc.identifier.uri http://172.21.6.100:8080/xmlui/handle/123456789/188
dc.description.abstract The present study was designed to quantitatively measure and compare the levels and variations of total protein, individual amino acids, and computed protein efficiency ratio (C-PER) in raw and traditionally processed products of one recently released quality protein maize (QPM BH542) with four high-yield maize hybrids, namely flint BH660, semi-dent BH140, Pioneer 30H83, and Pioneer 30G97, as well as one local maize cultivar. The total protein content was variable among the cultivars ranging from 7% for BH660 to 8.6% for Pioneer 30H83, 8.9% for BH140, 9.8% for QPM BH542, 10.1% for local maize cultivar, and 11.8% for Pioneer 30G97, respectively. However, the QPM BH542 maize protein proved to be higher in nutritional quality than common maize proteins because it contained 30% to 82% more lysine, higher levels of arginine, tryptophan, histidine, threonine, cysteine, and valine. As a result, the QPM BH542 amino acid profile gives a good balance of total essential amino acids, limited only in lysine, and has a C-PER ratio of 2.2 compared to 1.14, 1.2, 1.4, 1.66, and 1.67 for Pioneer 30G97, local, BH-140, BH660, and Pioneer 30H83, respectively. The various traditional processes of maize have no significant effect on the protein nutritional quality of the new quality protein maize. Hence, the widely dissemination of it in agricultural cultivation as well as consumption by the general population is recommended.
dc.format.extent 269-273
dc.title Assessment of Protein Nutritional Quality and Effects of Traditional Processes: a Comparison Between Ethiopian Quality Protein Maize and Five Ethiopian Adapted Normal Maize Cultivars
dc.type Journal Article
ep.identifier.status Limted Access
ep.identifier.status Limited Access
ep.identifier.doi http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/food.200390063
ep.journal Food / Nahrung
ep.issue 4
ep.volume 47


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