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Food Chemistry

Study Course Description

Course Description Statuss:Approved
Course Description Version:9.00
Study Course Accepted:11.03.2024 14:50:15
Study Course Information
Course Code:SUUK_127LQF level:Level 6
Credit Points:5.00ECTS:7.50
Branch of Science:ChemistryTarget Audience:Medical Services
Study Course Supervisor
Course Supervisor:Viesturs Kreicbergs
Study Course Implementer
Structural Unit:Department of Sports and Nutrition
The Head of Structural Unit:
Contacts:Riga, 3 Cigorinu Street, suukatrsu[pnkts]lv, +371 67611559
Study Course Planning
Full-Time - Semester No.1
Lectures (count)0Lecture Length (academic hours)0Total Contact Hours of Lectures0
Classes (count)15Class Length (academic hours)3Total Contact Hours of Classes45
Total Contact Hours45
Full-Time - Semester No.2
Lectures (count)0Lecture Length (academic hours)0Total Contact Hours of Lectures0
Classes (count)12Class Length (academic hours)3Total Contact Hours of Classes36
Total Contact Hours36
Part-Time - Semester No.1
Lectures (count)0Lecture Length (academic hours)0Total Contact Hours of Lectures0
Classes (count)15Class Length (academic hours)3Total Contact Hours of Classes45
Total Contact Hours45
Part-Time - Semester No.2
Lectures (count)0Lecture Length (academic hours)0Total Contact Hours of Lectures0
Classes (count)12Class Length (academic hours)3Total Contact Hours of Classes36
Total Contact Hours36
Study course description
Preliminary Knowledge:
Inorganic and organic chemistry.
Objective:
To introduce students to the structure and chemical variability of the main components of foods.
Topic Layout (Full-Time)
No.TopicType of ImplementationNumberVenue
1Introduction to food chemistry. Classification of food-forming compounds by origin, nutritional importance and chemical structure. Monofunctional compounds (alcohols, phenols, aldehydes, ketones, amines and carboxylic acids) in nature and food. Food additives.Classes1.00auditorium
2Structure and nomenclature of polyfunctional compounds - hydroxy acids and amino acids. Trivial names for hydroxy acids. Properties of amino acids and hydroxy acids.Classes1.00auditorium
3Optical isomerism. Characterisation of optically active compounds. Fisher projection formulas and D, L nomenclature. Racemic mixture. Optical isomerism. Compounds with several chiral carbon atoms. Mesoform (tartaric acid). Hydroxy acids in nature and food. Hydroxy acids - food additives.Classes1.00auditorium
4Lipids. Definition of lipids. Characterisation of lipids: according to their polarity, saponifiability and significance in nature. Fatty acids. Structure, nomenclature and classification of fatty acids. Configuration and arrangement of double bonds in unsaturated fatty acids. Omega (ω) fatty acids and essential (irreplaceable) fatty acids. Conjugated linoleic acids (CLA).Classes1.00auditorium
5Physical and sensory properties of fatty acids. Fatty acid salts and esters. Properties of unsaturated fatty acids: hydrogenation (reduction), halogenation, isomerization and rearrangement reactions. Distribution of fatty acids in fats and oils.Classes1.00auditorium
6Fats and oils. Definition and characteristics (by origin and consistency). Physical properties of fats/oils (factors that determine their melting point). Nomenclature and isomerism of fats and oils. Properties of ester bonds in fats and oils. Hydrolysis reaction in acidic medium. Saponification (basic hydrolysis). Acidolysis, alcoholysis and transesterification reactions. Properties of double bonds - halogenation and hydrogenation (reduction) reactions.Classes1.00auditorium
7Numbers characterising the identity of fats/oils: saponification number and iodine number. Numbers characterising the spoilage and quality of fats/oils – acid number and peroxide number.Classes1.00other
8Autooxidation of fats/oils. Mechanism of oxidation. Primary and secondary oxidation products. Antioxidants – in nature and food additives. Distribution of fats/oils in natural and food products. Their importance in nutrition.Classes1.00other
9Polar lipids (definition). Classification of polar lipids. Coarsely dispersed systems. Emulsions. Orientation of hydrophilic and hydrophobic parts in emulsions. Phospholipids. Their classification and importance in life processes. Phosphatidic acid. The most important phospholipids: lecithins, cephalins, phosphatidylserine; phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylglycerol. Distribution of phospholipids in nature and importance in food.Classes1.00auditorium
10Emulsifiers – food additives. Other classes of polar lipids – plasmalogens, glyceroglycolipids, sphingophospholipids, sphingoglycolipids. Structure of sterols. Their classification by origin. Cholesterol in the human body and food. Phytosterols in nature. Provitamins of sterols. Waxes in nature and food.Classes1.00auditorium
11Carbohydrates. Classification and distribution of carbohydrates. Monosaccharides. Definition, general formula and nomenclature. Monosaccharide chain structure. Stereoisomerism and Fisher projection formulas. Enantiomers. Cyclic structures of monosaccharides. Chain-cycle tautomerism of monosaccharides (cyclo-oxo-tautomerism). Heywert perspective formulas for pyranose and furanose cycles (α-anomers and β-anomers).Classes1.00auditorium
12Cyclic structures of monosaccharides. Chain-cycle tautomerism of monosaccharides (cyclo-oxo-tautomerism). Heywert perspective formulas for pyranose and furanose cycles (α-anomers and β-anomers). Conformational formulae of pyranose cycles.Classes1.00other
13Chemical properties of monosaccharides. Properties of the carbonyl group. Properties of the glycosidic hydroxyl group. Dehydration of aldoses to form hydroxymethylfurfural (hexoses) or furfural (pentoses). Glucose, galactose, mannose, fructose, xylose and ribose (deoxyribose) in nature.Classes1.00other
14Monosaccharide derivatives – polyhydric alcohols (polyols), uronic acids, amino sugars, deoxysugars, gluconic acid, phosphoric acid esters of monosaccharides.Classes1.00auditorium
15Glycosides. Structure and characterisation of glycosides by: glycone, aglycone, glycosidic bond. O-glycosides: vanillin, amygdalin, flavonoid glycosides. S-glycosides (glucosinolates) – sinigrin.Classes1.00auditorium
16Oligosaccharides. Disaccharides – reducing and non-reducing disaccharides. Structure and nomenclature of reducing disaccharides. Oxoform and tautomerism of reducing disaccharides. Structure and nomenclature of non-reducing disaccharides.Classes1.00other
17Common chemical properties of disaccharides. Properties of reducing disaccharides – oxidation and hydrogenation (reduction). Lactose, maltose, sucrose in food. Cellobiose, isomaltose, gentiobiose, trehalose, melibiose, raffinose in nature. Relative sweetness of sugars and sugar alcohols.Classes1.00auditorium
18Polysaccharides. Characterisation of the structure of high molecular weight polysaccharides. Classification according to their role in living organisms and in food. Starch: structure of amylose and amylopectin. Starch hydrolysis and distribution in nature. Glycogen - structure and distribution.Classes1.00other
19Fibres. Cellulose - structure, hydrolysis and distribution. Pectic substances – structure, distribution and role in food. β-glycans – structure, distribution and role in food.Classes1.00auditorium
20Structure and classification of haemicelluloses. Cereal pentosans (arabinoxylans) – structure, distribution and role in food. Structure of connective tissue polysaccharides: hyaluronic acid. Polysaccharides - food additives: classification by origin and role. Modified starches and celluloses. Algal polysaccharides and plant resin polysaccharides.Classes1.00auditorium
21Heterocyclic compounds. Definition and classification principles of heterocyclic compounds. Five-membered aromatic heterocycles with one heteroatom. Furan, pyrrole and indole derivatives in nature and food. Pyridine. Pyridine/piperidine derivatives in nature and food.Classes1.00other
22Aromatic heterocycles with two heteroatoms – imidazole and pyrimidine derivatives. Purine derivatives in nature and food. RNA nucleotides – food additives. Non-aromatic oxygen containing six-membered heterocycles – coumarin and hormone.Classes1.00other
23α-Amino acids. Classification of amino acids according to their distribution in nature. Essential amino acids. Structure and classification of α-Amino acids according to the polarity of the side chains. Ionisation and isoelectric point of amino acids. Amino acid salts.Classes1.00other
24Non-proteinogenic (non-protein-forming) amino acids in nature and food. Betaines. Amino acid decarboxylation. Hydrolytic deamination of decarboxylated amino acids. Decarboxylation and deamination of asparagine (Asn).Classes1.00other
25Hydrogen bonds – intermolecular and intramolecular. The importance of amino acids in the formation of sensory properties of food. Polypeptides. Structure and nomenclature of polypeptides. Isomerism of dipeptides and tripeptides. Importance of polypeptides in nature. Polypeptides – creators of sensory properties of food.Classes1.00other
26Proteins. Protein structure – primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure. Protein solutions and their properties. Protein denaturation and hydrolysis.Classes1.00other
27Simple and complex proteins. Classification of simple proteins according to their solubility. Classification of complex proteins by prosthetic groups. Proteins in food. Comparison of the biological importance of proteins, fats and carbohydrates. Foods rich in protein. Biological nutritional value of proteins. Limiting amino acids.Classes1.00other
Topic Layout (Part-Time)
No.TopicType of ImplementationNumberVenue
1Introduction to food chemistry. Classification of food-forming compounds by origin, nutritional importance and chemical structure. Monofunctional compounds (alcohols, phenols, aldehydes, ketones, amines and carboxylic acids) in nature and food. Food additives.Classes1.00auditorium
2Structure and nomenclature of polyfunctional compounds - hydroxy acids and amino acids. Trivial names for hydroxy acids. Properties of amino acids and hydroxy acids.Classes1.00auditorium
3Optical isomerism. Characterisation of optically active compounds. Fisher projection formulas and D, L nomenclature. Racemic mixture. Optical isomerism. Compounds with several chiral carbon atoms. Mesoform (tartaric acid). Hydroxy acids in nature and food. Hydroxy acids - food additives.Classes1.00auditorium
4Lipids. Definition of lipids. Characterisation of lipids: according to their polarity, saponifiability and significance in nature. Fatty acids. Structure, nomenclature and classification of fatty acids. Configuration and arrangement of double bonds in unsaturated fatty acids. Omega (ω) fatty acids and essential (irreplaceable) fatty acids. Conjugated linoleic acids (CLA).Classes1.00auditorium
5Physical and sensory properties of fatty acids. Fatty acid salts and esters. Properties of unsaturated fatty acids: hydrogenation (reduction), halogenation, isomerization and rearrangement reactions. Distribution of fatty acids in fats and oils.Classes1.00auditorium
6Fats and oils. Definition and characteristics (by origin and consistency). Physical properties of fats/oils (factors that determine their melting point). Nomenclature and isomerism of fats and oils. Properties of ester bonds in fats and oils. Hydrolysis reaction in acidic medium. Saponification (basic hydrolysis). Acidolysis, alcoholysis and transesterification reactions. Properties of double bonds - halogenation and hydrogenation (reduction) reactions.Classes1.00auditorium
7Numbers characterising the identity of fats/oils: saponification number and iodine number. Numbers characterising the spoilage and quality of fats/oils – acid number and peroxide number.Classes1.00other
8Autooxidation of fats/oils. Mechanism of oxidation. Primary and secondary oxidation products. Antioxidants – in nature and food additives. Distribution of fats/oils in natural and food products. Their importance in nutrition.Classes1.00other
9Polar lipids (definition). Classification of polar lipids. Coarsely dispersed systems. Emulsions. Orientation of hydrophilic and hydrophobic parts in emulsions. Phospholipids. Their classification and importance in life processes. Phosphatidic acid. The most important phospholipids: lecithins, cephalins, phosphatidylserine; phosphatidylinositol, phosphatidylglycerol. Distribution of phospholipids in nature and importance in food.Classes1.00auditorium
10Emulsifiers – food additives. Other classes of polar lipids – plasmalogens, glyceroglycolipids, sphingophospholipids, sphingoglycolipids. Structure of sterols. Their classification by origin. Cholesterol in the human body and food. Phytosterols in nature. Provitamins of sterols. Waxes in nature and food.Classes1.00auditorium
11Carbohydrates. Classification and distribution of carbohydrates. Monosaccharides. Definition, general formula and nomenclature. Monosaccharide chain structure. Stereoisomerism and Fisher projection formulas. Enantiomers. Cyclic structures of monosaccharides. Chain-cycle tautomerism of monosaccharides (cyclo-oxo-tautomerism). Heywert perspective formulas for pyranose and furanose cycles (α-anomers and β-anomers).Classes1.00auditorium
12Cyclic structures of monosaccharides. Chain-cycle tautomerism of monosaccharides (cyclo-oxo-tautomerism). Heywert perspective formulas for pyranose and furanose cycles (α-anomers and β-anomers). Conformational formulae of pyranose cycles.Classes1.00other
13Chemical properties of monosaccharides. Properties of the carbonyl group. Properties of the glycosidic hydroxyl group. Dehydration of aldoses to form hydroxymethylfurfural (hexoses) or furfural (pentoses). Glucose, galactose, mannose, fructose, xylose and ribose (deoxyribose) in nature.Classes1.00other
14Monosaccharide derivatives – polyhydric alcohols (polyols), uronic acids, amino sugars, deoxysugars, gluconic acid, phosphoric acid esters of monosaccharides.Classes1.00other
15Glycosides. Structure and characterisation of glycosides by: glycone, aglycone, glycosidic bond. O-glycosides: vanillin, amygdalin, flavonoid glycosides. S-glycosides (glucosinolates) – sinigrin.Classes1.00other
16Oligosaccharides. Disaccharides – reducing and non-reducing disaccharides. Structure and nomenclature of reducing disaccharides. Oxoform and tautomerism of reducing disaccharides. Structure and nomenclature of non-reducing disaccharides.Classes1.00other
17Common chemical properties of disaccharides. Properties of reducing disaccharides – oxidation and hydrogenation (reduction). Lactose, maltose, sucrose in food. Cellobiose, isomaltose, gentiobiose, trehalose, melibiose, raffinose in nature. Relative sweetness of sugars and sugar alcohols.Classes1.00other
18Polysaccharides. Characterisation of the structure of high molecular weight polysaccharides. Classification according to their role in living organisms and in food. Starch: structure of amylose and amylopectin. Starch hydrolysis and distribution in nature. Glycogen - structure and distribution.Classes1.00other
19Fibres. Cellulose - structure, hydrolysis and distribution. Pectic substances – structure, distribution and role in food. β-glycans – structure, distribution and role in food.Classes1.00other
20Structure and classification of haemicelluloses. Cereal pentosans (arabinoxylans) – structure, distribution and role in food. Structure of connective tissue polysaccharides: hyaluronic acid. Polysaccharides - food additives: classification by origin and role. Modified starches and celluloses. Algal polysaccharides and plant resin polysaccharides.Classes1.00other
21Heterocyclic compounds. Definition and classification principles of heterocyclic compounds. Five-membered aromatic heterocycles with one heteroatom. Furan, pyrrole and indole derivatives in nature and food. Pyridine. Pyridine/piperidine derivatives in nature and food.Classes1.00other
22Aromatic heterocycles with two heteroatoms – imidazole and pyrimidine derivatives. Purine derivatives in nature and food. RNA nucleotides – food additives. Non-aromatic oxygen containing six-membered heterocycles – coumarin and hormone.Classes1.00other
23α-Amino acids. Classification of amino acids according to their distribution in nature. Essential amino acids. Structure and classification of α-Amino acids according to the polarity of the side chains. Ionisation and isoelectric point of amino acids. Amino acid salts.Classes1.00other
24Non-proteinogenic (non-protein-forming) amino acids in nature and food. Betaines. Amino acid decarboxylation. Hydrolytic deamination of decarboxylated amino acids. Decarboxylation and deamination of asparagine (Asn).Classes1.00other
25Hydrogen bonds – intermolecular and intramolecular. The importance of amino acids in the formation of sensory properties of food. Polypeptides. Structure and nomenclature of polypeptides. Isomerism of dipeptides and tripeptides. Importance of polypeptides in nature. Polypeptides – creators of sensory properties of food.Classes1.00other
26Proteins. Protein structure – primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure. Protein solutions and their properties. Protein denaturation and hydrolysis.Classes1.00other
27Simple and complex proteins. Classification of simple proteins according to their solubility. Classification of complex proteins by prosthetic groups. Proteins in food. Comparison of the biological importance of proteins, fats and carbohydrates. Foods rich in protein. Biological nutritional value of proteins. Limiting amino acids.Classes1.00other
Assessment
Unaided Work:
Independent study of theoretical topics, using both materials provided in class and other sources such as scientific books.
Assessment Criteria:
Examination method: exam (E). In the exam, the student demonstrates knowledge of the structure and properties of the food components – proteins, carbohydrates and lipids –, as well as their role in the diet. The average mark for the test work is a compulsory 50%. Written exam – compulsory 50%.
Final Examination (Full-Time):Exam (Written)
Final Examination (Part-Time):Exam (Written)
Learning Outcomes
Knowledge:As a result of completing the study course, the student acquires knowledge that gives a general understanding of food ingredients – compounds with energy value, compounds with biological value and compounds with sensory properties.
Skills:In the course of their professional activity, the student will be able to critically evaluate the suitability of foods in terms of their energetic and biological nutritional value, both in public catering and in helping to select diets for people with health problems.
Competencies:Using their knowledge and skills, the student will be able to recommend nutritious diets in public catering and help to select diets for people with health problems.
Bibliography
No.Reference
Required Reading
1J. M. de Man. Principles of Food Chemistry. 3rd ed. New York, Springer, 2017, p. 498
2T. Coultate. Food: The Chemistry of its Components. 6th ed., by the Royal Society of Chemistry’s, 2016, p. 620.
Additional Reading
1Žurnāls: Food Chemistry (IF-3.9). Izdevējs “Elsevier”
2Žurnāls: Annual Review of Food Science and Technology (IF – 5.98). Izdevējs “Annual Review Inc.”
3Žurnāls: Critical reviews in Food Science and Nutrition (IF – 5.1). Izdevējs “Taylor & Francis”
4Žurnāls: Trends in Food Science and Technology (IF – 4.6). Izdevējs “Elsevier”
5Žurnāls: Journal of Functional Foods (IF – 4.5). Izdevējs “Elsevier”