4.7 Review

An updated review on food-derived bioactive peptides: Focus on the regulatory requirements, safety, and bioavailability

Journal

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/1541-4337.12911

Keywords

bioavailability; food-derived bioactive peptides; functional foods; health promotion; regulatory requirements; safety

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31830069, 31671793, 31201449]
  2. Beijing Municipal Natural Science Foundation & Beijing Municipal Education Commission [KZ202110011016, KZ202010011018, KM202010011007]
  3. Foundation of Beijing Technology and Business University [PXM2017_014213_000036, PXM2018_014213_0000]

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This review focuses on the regulatory requirements, bioavailability, and safety of food-derived bioactive peptides (BAPs). The study highlights the importance of human research on BAPs for obtaining healthy food approvals and preventing misinformation and false promises to consumers.
Food-derived bioactive peptides (BAPs) are recently utilized as functional food raw materials owing to their potential health benefits. Although there is a huge amount of scientific research about BAPs' identification, purification, characterization, and physiological functions, and subsequently, many BAPs have been marketed, there is a paucity of review on the regulatory requirements, bioavailability, and safety of BAPs. Thus, this review focuses on the toxic peptides that could arise from their primary proteins throughout protein extraction, protein pretreatment, and BAPs' formulation. Also, the influences of BAPs' length and administration dosage on safety are summarized. Lastly, the challenges and possibilities in BAPs' bioavailability and regulatory requirements in different countries were also presented. Results revealed that the human studies of BAPs are essential for approvals as healthy food and to prevent the consumers from misinformation and false promises. The BAPs that escape the gastrointestinal tract epithelium and move to the stomach are considered good peptides and get circulated into the blood using different pathways. In addition, the hydrophobicity, net charge, molecular size, length, amino acids composition/sequences, and structural characteristics of BAPs are critical for bioavailability, and appropriate food-grade carriers can enhance it. The abovementioned features are also vital to optimize the solubility, water holding capacity, emulsifying ability, and foaming property of BAPs in food products. In the case of safety, the possible allergenic and toxic peptides often exhibit physiological functions and could be produced during the hydrolysis of food proteins. It was also noted that the production of iso-peptides bonds and undesirable Maillard reaction might occur during protein extraction, sample pretreatments, and peptide synthesis.

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