The proteinases of germinating barley (Hordeum vulgare L.) hydrolyze storage proteins into amino acids and small peptides that can be used by the growing plant or, during brewing, by yeast. They are critical for the malting and brewing processes because several aspects of brewing are affected by the amounts of protein, peptide, and amino acids that are in the wort. This study was carried out to quantitatively measure when endoproteinases form in green malt and whether they are inactivated at the high temperatures that occur during malt kilning. Little endoproteolytic activity was present in ungerminated barley, but the activities began forming 1 day into the "germination" phase of malting, and they were nearly maximal by the third germination day. Quantitative studies with azogelatin "in solution" assays showed that the green malt endoproteolytic activities were not inactivated under commercial kilning conditions that use temperatures as high as 85 degrees C but that some actually increased during the final kilning step. Qualitative (2-D, IEF x PAGE) analyses, which allow the study of individual proteases, showed that some of the enzymes were affected by heating at 68 and 85 degrees C, during the final stages of kilning. These changes obviously did not, however, decrease the overall proteolytic activity.
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