Antioxidant peptides from alternative sources reduce lipid oxidation in 5% fish oil-in-water emulsions (pH 4) and fish oil-enriched mayonnaise
Metadatos
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Elsevier
Materia
Bioactive peptides Antioxidant activity Lipid oxidation Single-cell Potato
Fecha
2023-06-03Referencia bibliográfica
E. Varona et al. Antioxidant peptides from alternative sources reduce lipid oxidation in 5% fish oil-in-water emulsions (pH 4) and fish oil-enriched mayonnaise. Food Chemistry 426 (2023) 136498[https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodchem.2023.136498]
Patrocinador
Innovation Fund Denmark (Grant No.: 7045-00021B).Resumen
Bioinformatics tools were used to predict radical scavenging and metal chelating activities of peptides derived
from abundant potato, seaweed, microbial, and spinach proteins. The antioxidant activity was evaluated in 5%
oil-in-water emulsions (pH4) and best-performing peptides were tested in mayonnaise and compared with EDTA.
Emulsion physical stability was intact. The peptide DDDNLVLPEVYDQD showed the highest protection against
oxidation in both emulsions by retarding the formation of oxidation products and depletion of tocopherols during
storage, but it was less efficient than EDTA when evaluated in mayonnaise. In low-fat emulsions, formation of
hydroperoxides was reduced 4-folds after 5 days compared to control. The concentration effect of the peptide
was confirmed in mayonnaise at the EDTA equimolar concentration. The second-best performing peptides were
NNKWVPCLEFETEHGFVYREHH in emulsion and AGDWLIGDR in mayonnaise. In general, the peptide efficacy
was higher in low-fat emulsions. Results demonstrated that peptide negative net charge was important for
chelating activity.