Brazzein
| Brazzein | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Solution NMR structure of the brazzein protein. | |||||||
| Identifiers | |||||||
| Organism | |||||||
| Symbol | MONA_DIOCU | ||||||
| PDB | 1BRZ | ||||||
| UniProt | P56552 | ||||||
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Brazzein is a sweet-tasting protein that occurs naturally in oubli (Pentadiplandra brazzeana), a fruit native to the Atlantic coastal areas of Central Africa. Brazzein was named in 1994 by scientists at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It is roughly 500 to 2000 times sweeter than sucrose.
Brazzein is found in the extracellular region of oubli fruit, in the pulp tissue surrounding the seeds. It was first discovered and isolated in 1989 by Wel et al. under the name of pentadin. The corresponding author of both these publications has later opined that pentadin and brazzein are two different names for the same protein. Even though pentadin is the earlier proposed name, brazzein is the more commonly used name after more extensive characterisation of the sweet protein.
Like other sweet proteins discovered in plants, such as monellin and thaumatin, brazzein is extremely sweet compared to commonly used sweeteners. The fruit tastes sweet to humans, monkeys, and bonobos, but gorillas have mutations in their sweetness receptors so that they do not find brazzein sweet, and they are not known to eat the fruit.