T HE effect of heat on trypsin inhibitor (TI) activity during steam-infusion cooking of soymilk was studied. At 154°C only 40 s process time reduced TI to the same level as conventional cooking at 99°C for 60 min. Between 99 and 154°C the kinetics of TI inactivation followed behavior exemplified by the summation of two first-order reactions. Spline fitting functions effectively modeled the data with r 2 ranging from 0.984 to 0.999. The heat-labile reaction was attributed to Kunitz inhibitor and the heat-stable reaction, to Bowman-Birk inhibitor. The former accounted for approximately 85 percent of the iriginal TI activity. Arrhenius equation kinetic constants for each reaction were calculated.
due to an increase in the free energy of reaction by forming a relatively unstable cobalt(III) complex and/or a relatively stable MX"+ product. Other functions of bridging ligands (e.g., changing the path of reaction, altering selection rules, varying the lifetimes of bridged intermediates, etc.) are much less obvious and will be considered elsewhere.
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