Enhancement of Both Salivary Protein-Enological Tannin Interactions and Astringency Perception by Ethanol
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Obreque Slier, Elías
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Enhancement of Both Salivary Protein-Enological Tannin Interactions and Astringency Perception by Ethanol
Abstract
Red wine astringency has been associated with interactions of tannins with salivary proteins.
Tannins are active protein precipitants. Not much evidence exists demonstrating contribution of
other wine components to astringency. We aimed to investigate an eventual role of ethanol both in
astringency and salivary protein-enological tannin interactions. A trained sensory panel scored
perceived astringency. Salivary protein-tannin interactions were assessed by observing both
tannin-dependent changes in salivary protein diffusion on cellulose membranes and tannin-induced
salivary protein precipitation. Proanthocyanidins and gallotannins in aqueous and hydroalcoholic
solutions were assayed. A biphasic mode of diffusion on cellulose membranes displayed by salivary
proteins was unaffected after dilution with water or enological concentrations of ethanol. At those
concentrations ethanol was not astringent. In aqueous solution, tannins provoked both restriction of
salivary protein diffusion, protein precipitation, and astringency. Those effects were exacerbated by
13% ethanol. In summary, enological concentrations of ethanol exacerbate astringency and salivary
protein-tannin interactions.
Patrocinador
This study was partially supported by grants Fondecyt-Chile
1080559, Corfo-Innova Tecnovid-05CTE02-04, and DI-Universidad
de Chile Mult-05/35-2.
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J. Agric. Food Chem., Vol. 58, No. 6, 2010, 3729–3735
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