4.5 Article

Comparison of alcalase- and pepsin-treated oilseed protein hydrolysates - Experimental validation of predicted antioxidant, antihypertensive and antidiabetic properties

Journal

CURRENT RESEARCH IN FOOD SCIENCE
Volume 4, Issue -, Pages 141-149

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.crfs.2021.03.001

Keywords

Antioxidant; Antidiabetic; Antihypertensive; Angiotensin converting enzyme; Diabetes; Dipeptidyl peptidase IV; alpha-glucosidase; Hypertension; Oxidative stress; In silico prediction; In vitro validation; Oilseeds

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Emerging evidence suggests the importance of food-derived bioactive peptides for human health. Oilseed proteins, particularly low molecular weight fractions, show potential as affordable and sustainable sources of bioactive peptides with antioxidant, antihypertensive, and antidiabetic capabilities. While there were limited correlations between in silico predictions and in vitro experimental results, oilseed proteins may serve as suitable replacers for dairy proteins in the development of functional foods.
There is emerging evidence on the importance of food-derived bioactive peptides to promote human health. Compared with animal derived proteins, plant proteins, in particular oilseed proteins, are considered as affordable and sustainable sources of bioactive peptides. Based on our previous bioinformatic analysis, five oilseed proteins (flaxseed, rapeseed, sunflower, sesame and soybean) were enzymatically hydrolysed using alcalase and pepsin (pH 1.3 and pH 2.1). Further, low molecular weight (M-w < 3 kDa) fractions were generated using ultrafiltration. The protein hydrolysates and their low M-w fractions were evaluated for their in vitro antioxidant, antihypertensive and antidiabetic capabilities, in comparison with samples obtained from two dairy proteins (whey and casein). Apart from dipeptidyl-peptidase IV inhibition, significantly stronger bioactivities were detected for the low M-w fractions. In partial agreement with in silico predictions, most oilseed hydrolysates exerted comparable angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitory capability to dairy proteins, whilst whey protein was the most promising source of dipeptidyl-peptidase IV inhibitors. Apart from alcalase-treated soybean, dairy proteins were more efficient in releasing antioxidant peptides as compared to oilseed proteins. On the other hand, soybean protein hydrolysates showed the highest alpha-glucosidase inhibitory activity amongst all protein sources. Overall, there was limited correlation between in silico predictions and in vitro experimental results. Nevertheless, our results indicate that oilseed proteins have potential as bioactive peptide sources, and they might therefore be suitable replacers for dairy proteins as well as good sources for development of functional foods.

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