4.6 Article

Purification and molecular docking of angiotensin converting enzyme-inhibitory peptides derived from corn gluten meal hydrolysate and from in silico gastrointestinal digestion

Journal

PROCESS BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 129, Issue -, Pages 113-120

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.procbio.2023.03.006

Keywords

Angiotensin I -converting enzyme (ACE); Corn gluten meal; Molecular docking; in silico gastrointestinal digestion; Puri fication

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Corn gluten meal was hydrolyzed to obtain a 3-10 kDa fraction containing ACE inhibitory peptides, with DLLGCS identified as the most active ACE inhibitor. Molecular docking analysis revealed that DLLGCS and CS peptides interacted with specific residues at the non-active site of ACE primarily through hydrogen bonding.
Corn gluten meal (CGM) was hydrolyzed by Alcalase with the degree of hydrolysis (DH) and protein recovery of 28.7 % and 67.7 %, respectively. Ultrafiltration revealed that the 3-10 kDa fraction (IC50 = 15.98 mu g/mL) involved potent ACE inhibitory peptides. The peptides in the fraction were further separated by size exclusion chromatography and reverse-phase chromatography. The novel peptide DLLGCS was identified to be the most active ACE inhibitor (IC50 = 39.0 mu M). The in silico digested peptide CS was approximately 4.5 times higher than its parent counterpart (IC50 = 8.5 mu M). Peptides CS and DLLGCS showed an uncompetitive inhibitor characteristic with Ki values of 12.52 and 11.40 mu M, respectively. Based on molecular docking, both peptides interacted with the nonactive site of ACE, primarily via hydrogen bonds at Arg522, Asp121, Glu123 and Lys118 residues for DLLCGS and Glu162, Ser147 and Glu349 residues for CS. Therefore, peptides originated from CGM hydrolysates could exhibit a higher degree of inhibition against ACE enzyme upon gastrointestinal digestion, which is likely to be a potential source of bioactive peptides with ACE inhibitory activity.

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