4.6 Article

Therapeutic Potential of Tuna Backbone Peptide and Its Analogs: An In Vitro and In Silico Study

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules26072064

Keywords

bioactive peptide; in vitro; in silico; multifunctional; seafood by-product

Funding

  1. Oregon Agricultural Experiment Station
  2. Honors College at Oregon State University

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The study evaluated the antioxidant activity and therapeutic potential of tuna backbone peptide (TBP) and its analogs, showing promising antioxidant activities of TBP analogs in vitro and their potential multifunctionality.
Tuna backbone peptide (TBP) has been reported to exert potent inhibitory activity against lipid peroxidation in vitro. Since this bears relevant physiological implications, this study was undertaken to assess the impact of peptide modifications on its bioactivity and other therapeutic potential using in vitro and in silico approach. Some TBP analogs, despite lower purity than the parent peptide, exerted promising antioxidant activities in vitro demonstrated by ABTS radical scavenging assay and cellular antioxidant activity assay. In silico digestion of the peptides resulted in the generation of antioxidant, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE), and dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPPIV) inhibitory dipeptides. Using bioinformatics platforms, we found five stable TBP analogs that hold therapeutic potential with their predicted multifunctionality, stability, non-toxicity, and low bitterness intensity. This work shows how screening and prospecting for bioactive peptides can be improved with the use of in vitro and in silico approaches.

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