Hiromi Kameya
National Agriculture and Food Research Organization
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Publication
Featured researches published by Hiromi Kameya.
Journal of Food Protection | 2012
Keitarou Kimura; Hiromi Kameya; Daisuke Nei; Kakihara Y; Shoji Hagiwara; Okadome H; Tanji K; Setsuko Todoriki; Matsukura U; Kawamoto G
The fate of radioactive cesium ((134)Cs plus (137)Cs) during the milling of contaminated Japanese wheat cultivars harvested in FY2011, and during the cooking of Japanese udon noodles made from the wheat flour, was investigated. Grain samples containing various radioactive cesium concentrations (36.6 to 772 Bq/kg [dry weight]) were milled using a laboratory-scale test mill to produce eight fractions: three break flours (1B, 2B, and 3B), three reduction flours (1M, 2M, and 3M), bran, and shorts. The concentrations of radioactive cesium were found to be highest in the bran fractions of all the samples tested, with 2.3- to 2.5-fold higher values than that of the whole grain. Shorts contained radioactive cesium levels similar to that of the whole grain. In contrast, radioactive cesium concentrations in other fractions were found to be less than half the concentration in whole grain. The average processing factor (PF) value calculated for patent flour (0.401 ± 0.048), made from the mixture of 1B, 2B, 1M, and 2M for human consumption, or for low-grade flour (0.467 ± 0.045), made from the mixture of 3B and 3M, was found to be less than 0.5; whereas the average PF value (2.07 ± 0.232) for feed bran (mixture of bran and shorts), which has been used mainly as livestock feed in Japan, was over 2.0. Boiling udon noodles (made from patent flour) resulted in a substantial reduction (>70 % of initial amount) of radioactive cesium. Moreover, radioactive cesium was reduced further (<10 % of the initial amount) in the subsequent rinsing process, and the PF value of boiled noodles was recorded as 0.194. These results demonstrated that patent flour containing radioactive cesium can be made safe for human consumption by adopting the standard limit for radioactive cesium in wheat grain and that radioactive cesium in udon noodles is substantially reduced by cooking.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2011
Susu Chen; Yuka Morita; Kimie Saito; Hiromi Kameya; Mitsutoshi Nakajima; Setsuko Todoriki
Thermoluminescence (TL) and 2-alkylcyclobutanone (2-ACB) analyses were performed to identify irradiated prawns ( Penaeus monodon ). With the TL method, minerals were extracted from prawns using acid hydrolysis. The experimental results satisfied the evaluation criteria of European Norm (EN) 1788, even after low-dose irradiation (0.5 kGy) and a 60 day storage at -20 °C. With the 2-ACB method, 2-dodecylcyclobutanone (2-DCB) and 2-tetradecylcyclobutanone (2-TCB) were successfully extracted from prawns by direct solvent extraction with purification using a conventional silica column and a sulfoxide column, which was used for 2-ACB for the first time. Both 2-ACB derivatives were absent from the non-irradiated samples but were identified in all irradiated samples by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry. Moreover, 2-DCB and 2-TCB production correlated with the applied dose (2.5-10 kGy), and the correlation did not diminish after 60 days of storage at -20 °C for any dose. Therefore, these two techniques provide rapid, simple, and promising methods for routine investigation of frozen prawns.
Food Chemistry | 2014
Hiromi Kameya; Jun Watanabe; Yuko Takano-Ishikawa; Setsuko Todoriki
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) are considered to be causative agents of many health problems. In spite of this, the radical-specific scavenging capacities of food samples have not been well studied. In the present work, we have developed an electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) spin trapping method for analysis of the scavenging capacities of food samples for multiple ROS, utilising the same photolysis procedure for generating each type of radical. The optimal conditions for effective evaluation of hydroxyl, superoxide, and alkoxyl radical scavenging capacity were determined. Quantification of radical adducts was found to be highly reproducible, with variations of less than 4%. The optimised EPR spin trapping method was used to analyse the scavenging capacities of 54 different vegetable extracts for multiple radicals, and the results were compared with oxygen radical absorption capacity values. Good correlations between the two methods were observed for superoxide and alkoxyl radicals, but not for hydroxyl.
Journal of Food Protection | 2013
Mayumi Hachinohe; Keitarou Kimura; Yuji Kubo; Katsuo Tanji; Shioka Hamamatsu; Shoji Hagiwara; Daisuke Nei; Hiromi Kameya; Rikio Nakagawa; Ushio Matsukura; Setsuko Todoriki; Shinichi Kawamoto
We investigated the fate of radioactive cesium ((134)Cs plus (137)Cs) during the production of tofu, natto, and nimame (boiled soybean) from a contaminated Japanese soybean cultivar harvested in FY2011. Tofu, natto, and nimame were made from soybean grains containing radioactive cesium (240 to 340 Bq/kg [dry weight]), and the radioactive cesium in the processed soybean foods and in by-product fractions such as okara, broth, and waste water was measured with a germanium semiconductor detector. The processing factor is the ratio of radioactive cesium concentration of a product before and after processing. For tofu, natto, nimame, and for the by-product okara, processing factors were 0.12, 0.40, 0.20, and 0.18, respectively; this suggested that these three soybean foods and okara, used mainly as an animal feed, can be considered safe for human and animal consumption according to the standard limit for radioactive cesium of soybean grains. Furthermore, the ratio of radioactive cesium concentrations in the cotyledon, hypocotyl, and seed coat portions of the soybean grain was found to be approximately 1:1:0.4.
Food Chemistry | 2017
Vipavee Trivittayasil; Hiromi Kameya; Toshihiko Shoji; Mizuki Tsuta; Mito Kokawa; Junichi Sugiyama
In this study, the potential of using fluorescence fingerprint, also known as fluorescence excitation-emission matrix, for estimating the scavenging capacity of peach extract on reactive oxygen species (ROS) was investigated. Samples from each of the five cultivars (Asama Hakuto, Hakuho, Kawanakajima Hakuto, Natsukko and Ougonto) were freeze-dried and crushed. The scavenging capacities of peach extracts for the target ROS (hydroxyl, superoxide, alkoxyl radicals and singlet oxygen) were measured by electron paramagnetic resonance spin trapping method. Fluorescence fingerprints of the same samples were obtained. Partial least squares regression analysis was carried out to develop prediction models for ROS scavenging capacity. The models were assessed by external validation. Fluorescence fingerprint was found to accurately estimate the scavenging capacity for the alkoxyl and superoxide radicals with the prediction error of 0.06mmoltroloxeq./mL and 0.31mmolα-lipoicacideq./mL with a coefficient of determination of prediction (R2P) of 0.78 and 0.91, respectively.
Food Chemistry | 2018
Shigeaki Nakazawa; Tomomi Kanno; Kenji Sugisaki; Hiromi Kameya; Miki Matsui; Mitsuko Ukai; Kazunobu Sato; Takeji Takui
Fe-transferrins/their homologues in ex-vivo mushrooms were identified by ESR spectroscopy at liquid helium temperature, 4 K. The ESR fine-structure signals from Grifola frondosa were analyzed by spectral simulation with a full spin-Hamiltonian approach, determining the spin Hamiltonian parameters of the ferric iron species bound in the biological environment: S = 5/2, g = (2.045, 2.01, 2.235), |D| = 0.28 cm-1, |E/D| = 0.05. The zero-field splitting (ZFS) parameters, D- and E-values, are very close to the reported values, |D| = 0.25 cm-1 and |E/D| = 0.06, for an Fe-transferrin with oxalate anion, and to |D| = 0.25 cm-1 and |E/D| = 0.04 for one with malonate anion in human sera, suggesting that the Fe3+ species are from Fe-transferrins or their homologues. Quantum chemical calculations of the ZFS tensors for Fe-transferrins were carried out. Fe-transferrins/homologues have been identified for all the mushrooms under study, suggesting that such Fe3+ enzymes are widely distributed in mushrooms.
Journal of The Food Hygienic Society of Japan (shokuhin Eiseigaku Zasshi) | 2014
Hiromi Kameya; Satoshi Takatsuki; Rieko Matsuda; Tomoaki Tsutsumi; Setsuko Todoriki
Prawn, shrimp and crabs sold in Japan are mostly imported from overseas. Detection of irradiated crustaceans is very important for quality assurance. In this study, we used ESR to detect radiation-induced radicals after irradiation of prawn, shrimp and crabs of major species. No radiation-induced radicals were detected in prawn (black tiger prawn) or shrimp (white leg shrimp). Radiation-induced radicals due to hydroxyapatite were detected in the claws of snow crab, red king crab, and swimming crab. Our results indicate that ESR measurement on the claw parts of these three species of crab can be used to determine their irradiation history.
Radiation Physics and Chemistry | 2012
Hiromi Kameya; Akihiro Miyanoshita; Taro Imamura; Setsuko Todoriki
Radioisotopes | 2007
Hiromi Kameya; Mitsuko Ukai
Food Chemistry | 2012
Susu Chen; Tomoaki Tsutsumi; Satoshi Takatsuki; Rieko Matsuda; Hiromi Kameya; Mitsutoshi Nakajima; Masakazu Furuta; Setsuko Todoriki