4.7 Article

Recent developments in peptidomics for the quali-quantitative analysis of food-derived peptides in human body fluids and tissues

Journal

TRENDS IN FOOD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY
Volume 126, Issue -, Pages 41-60

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE LONDON
DOI: 10.1016/j.tifs.2022.06.014

Keywords

Food -derived peptides; Peptidomics; Body fluids; tissues; Mass spectrometry; Nutrition

Funding

  1. European Union [863059, 871083]
  2. Food Innovation Community of the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT-Food) [21256]
  3. Italian Ministero dellUniversit a e della Ricerca [PRIN 2017_MZ5KWM_002]

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This study aims to provide a comprehensive overview of bioactive food-derived peptides identified in various body fluids and tissues, and to describe their absorption mechanisms and metabolic processes. Available information suggests that while these peptides are present in organism tissues/body fluids, only a few of them have demonstrated substantial bioavailability and potential bioactivity.
Background: Various bioactive peptides are present in foods and food protein hydrolysates, or are generated in the stomach/intestine of organisms after digestion of dietary proteins. Those resisting gastrointestinal degra-dation can exert local effects in the gut or systemic effects in the organism body as result of their transport across the intestinal epithelium in the bloodstream, and subsequent adsorption in various organs. For most of these molecules, no concentration data regarding body fluids/tissues are available; this information is essential to rationalize their bioavailability and putative bioactivity. Scope and approach: The main purpose of this study is to provide an exhaustive overview of the bioactive food -derived peptides identified in the gastrointestinal tract, blood, body tissues, urine, breastmilk and feces of animal models or humans fed specific diets, as well as a description of the adsorption mechanisms and metabolic processes eventually affecting their fate. Untargeted and targeted peptidomic methods used for their quali-quantitative description are also reported, together with recent technological advances that have partially solved various analytical challenges in this research field and have disclosed future promising scenarios in nutrition and physiology. Key findings and conclusions: Available information emphasizes that organism tissues/body fluids are pervaded of food-derived species resulting from the digestion of dietary proteins, including some already proved having a specific biological activity. For some for which blood concentration was measured, ascertained data highlight levels in the nanomolar range, which are lower than those generally used for in vitro functional assays. Conversely, few peptides have shown concentration values compatible with a substantial molecular bioavail-ability and a putative bioactivity. Thus, it remains uncertain if the presence of bioactive food-derived peptides in the body fluids/tissues can be associated with a significant functional effect. Accordingly, the actual study of these exogenous peptides in the human body is more relevant than ever, with the ultimate aim of tangling the complex relationship between diet and health.

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