Production and identification of angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory peptides from Mediterranean fish discards
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
García Moreno, Pedro Jesús; Espejo Carpio, Francisco Javier; Guadix Escobar, Antonio María; Guadix Escobar, Emilia MaríaEditorial
ELSEVIER
Materia
Fish discards Enzymatic hydrolysis SEC fractionation ACE-inhibitory activity Bioactive peptides
Fecha
2015-10-01Referencia bibliográfica
P.J. García-Moreno, F.J. Espejo-Carpio, A. Guadix, E.M. Guadix (2015). Journal of Functional Foods, 18: 95-105
Patrocinador
Spanish National Plan I + D + i (CTQ2011-23009); Andalusian Government (project P12-AGR-1993).Resumen
The production of peptides exhibiting Angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE)-inhibitory activity from discarded Mediterranean fish species such as sardine, horse mackerel, axillary seabream, bogue and small-spotted catshark was studied. The evolution of the ACE-inhibitory activity with the degree of hydrolysis (DH) of protein hydrolysates was also investigated. Hydrolysates of horse mackerel and small-spotted catshark, both obtained with the simultaneous addition of subtilisin and trypsin, showed the highest antihypertensive activity (IC50 of 279 and 302μg/mL, respectively). For horse mackerel hydrolysate, fraction B (130-2350Da) exhibited the highest ACE-inhibitory activity (IC50=85μg/mL). In the case of small-spotted catshark hydrolysate, fraction D (<470Da) presented the lowest IC50 value (27μg/mL). In addition, 14 novel ACE-inhibitory peptides were identified in horse mackerel and small-spotted catshark hydrolysates. The peptide VAMPF, identified in fraction D of small-spotted catshark hydrolysate, is one of the most promising peptides according to its low IC50 value obtained by the QSAR-model (IC50=0.44μM)