| Literature DB >> 28524092 |
Jayachandran Venkatesan1, Sukumaran Anil2, Se-Kwon Kim3, Min Suk Shim4.
Abstract
Marine fish provide a rich source of bioactive compounds such as proteins and peptides. The bioactive proteins and peptides derived from marine fish have gained enormous interest in nutraceutical, pharmaceutical, and cosmeceutical industries due to their broad spectrum of bioactivities, including antioxidant, antimicrobial, and anti-aging activities. Recently, the development of cosmeceuticals using marine fish-derived proteins and peptides obtained from chemical or enzymatical hydrolysis of fish processing by-products has increased rapidly owing to their activities in antioxidation and tissue regeneration. Marine fish-derived collagen has been utilized for the development of cosmeceutical products due to its abilities in skin repair and tissue regeneration. Marine fish-derived peptides have also been utilized for various cosmeceutical applications due to their antioxidant, antimicrobial, and matrix metalloproteinase inhibitory activities. In addition, marine fish-derived proteins and hydrolysates demonstrated efficient anti-photoaging activity. The present review highlights and presents an overview of the current status of the isolation and applications of marine fish-derived proteins and peptides. This review also demonstrates that marine fish-derived proteins and peptides have high potential for biocompatible and effective cosmeceuticals.Entities:
Keywords: anti-photoaging; antioxidant; collagen; cosmeceuticals; hydrolysates; marine fish; peptides; proteins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28524092 PMCID: PMC5450549 DOI: 10.3390/md15050143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Articles indexed in Scopus with the keywords (A) marine fish proteins and (B) marine fish peptides. Graph shows the continuous research growth on marine fish proteins and peptides. The bar graph highlights the number of articles indexed in Scopus on “marine fish proteins”, which is greater than that of “marine fish peptides”.
Figure 2A flowchart for the isolation of collagen from marine fish skin. (A) acid-soluble collagen (ASC) method and (B) pepsin-soluble collagen (PSC) method.
Important marine fish species used to isolate collagen.
| Fish Species Name | Parts | Method | Yield (%) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Skin | PSC | 54.3 | [ | |
| Bone | ASC and PSC | -- | [ | |
| Skin | ASC | -- | [ | |
| Skin | ASC and PSC | 10.7 and 44.7 | [ | |
| Skin | ASC and PSC | 0.58 and 16.23 | [ | |
| Skin | ASC and PSC | 9.0 and 4.7 | [ | |
| Bone | ASC and PSC | 30.5 and 27.6 | [ | |
| Bone | ASC and PSC | 45.1 and 48.6 | [ | |
| Skin | ASC and PSC | 80 and 7.1 | [ | |
| Scales | ASC | 0.13–1.5% | [ | |
| All parts | ASC and PSC | 13.0 and 5.5 | [ | |
| Scales | ASC and PSC | 1.25 and 3 | [ | |
| Skin and bone | ASC | 10.94 and 1.59 (Skin and bone) | [ | |
| Skin | PSC | -- | [ | |
| Skin | PSC | -- | [ | |
| Scale | ASC and PSC | 0.46 and 1.2 | [ | |
| Skin | ASC and PSC | 16.8 and 28 | [ | |
| All parts | ASC and PSC | 5.5 and 33.2 | [ | |
| All parts | PSC | 46.4 | [ | |
| All parts | PSC | 9–19 | [ |
Figure 3The flowchart showing the common procedures for the isolation and identification of the marine fish-derived peptides through enzymatic hydrolysis methods [70].
Conditions for the enzymatic hydrolysis of tuna backbone proteins.
| Enzymes for Hydrolysis | Buffer | pH | Temperature (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| alcalase | 0.1 M Na2HPO4–NaH2PO4 | 7 | 50 |
| α-chymotrypsin | 0.1 M Na2HPO4–NaH2PO4 | 8 | 37 |
| papain | 0.1 M Na2HPO4–NaH2PO4 | 6 | 37 |
| pepsin | 0.1 M Glycine–HCl | 2 | 37 |
| neutrase | 0.1 M Na2HPO4–NaH2PO4 | 8 | 50 |
| trypsin | 0.1 M Na2HPO4–NaH2PO4 | 8 | 37 |
Biological activities for cosmeceutical applications. MMP: matrix metalloproteinase.
| Activity | Cosmeceutical Applications | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Antioxidant | Anti-aging, photo-protective effects | [ |
| Tyrosinase inhibitor | Whitening | [ |
| MMP inhibitor | Anti-wrinkle | [ |
| Anti-inflammatory | Skin soothing | [ |
Potential bioactive antioxidant peptides from marine fish resources.
| Fish Species Name | Enzymes for Hydrolysis | Peptides (Amino Acid Sequence) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| protease N | -- | [ | |
| alcalase, α-chymotrypsin, neutrase, papain, pepsin, and trypsin | H-Leu-Asn-Leu-Pro-Thr-Ala-Val-Tyr-Met-Val-Thr-OH | [ | |
| Salmon | alcalase, flavourzyme, neutrase, pepsin, protamex, and trypsin | Peptides (unknown sequence, 1000–2000 Da) | [ |
| alcalase, neutral protease, papain, pepsin, and trypsin | His-Asp-His-Pro-Val-Cys and His-Glu-Lys-Val-Cys | [ | |
| pepsin, trypsin, papain, α-chymotrypsin, alcalase, and neutrase | Glu-Ser-Thr-Val-Pro-Glu-Arg-Thr-His-Pro-Ala-Cys-Pro-Asp-Phe-Asn | [ | |
| papain, pepsin, trypsin, neutrase, alcalase, kojizyme, protamex, and α-chymotrypsin | Val-Cys-Ser-Val and Cys-Ala-Ala-Pro | [ | |
| pepsin, trypsin, and α-chymotrypsin | Ala–Cys–Phe–Leu (518.5 Da), | [ | |
| pepsin/trypsin, and α-chymotrypsin | Asn-His-Arg-Tyr-Asp-Arg (856 Da) | [ | |
| pepsin/trypsin and α-chymotrypsin | Gly-Asn-Arg-Gly-Phe-Ala-Cys-Arg-His-Ala (1101.5 Da) | [ | |
| trypsin, R-chymotrypsin, and pepsin | His-Gly-Pro-Leu-Gly-Pro-Leu | [ | |
| pepsin, trypsin, and α-chymotrypsin | Lys-Thr-Phe-Cys-Gly-Arg-His | [ | |
| alcalase, pronase E, pepsin, and trypsin | Asp-Pro-Ala-Leu-Ala-Thr-Glu-Pro-Asp-Pro-Met-Pro-Phe | [ | |
| Validase ® BNP (V) and Flavourzyme ® | -- | [ | |
| properase E and multifect neutral | Glu-Gly-Leu (317.33 Da) and Tyr-Gly-Asp-Glu-Tyr | [ | |
| alcalase, neutrase, α-chymotrypsin, papain, pepsin, and trypsin | Ile–Val–Gly–Gly–Phe–Pro–His–Tyr–Leu | [ |
Marine fish species and enzymes used in the isolation of antimicrobial peptides. Targeted microorganisms used to check the marine fish-derived antimicrobial peptides are shown.
| Name of Fish Species | Enzymes for Hydrolysis | Microorganisms | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| pepsin | [ | ||
| papain, pepsin, trypsin, alkaline protease, acidic protease, and flavoring protease | [ | ||
| -- | [ | ||
| protamex, neutrase, papain, and flavourzyme. | [ |
Photo-protective and anti-photoaging proteins and peptides from marine fish.
| Name of Fish Species and Parts | Fish-Derived Proteins and Peptides | Enzymes for Hydrolysis | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jellyfish | Collagen | properase E | [ |
| Cod skin | Collagen polypeptides | alkaline protease and pepsin | [ |
| Cod skin | Gelatin hydrolysate | alkaline protease and trypsin | [ |
| Salmon skin | Gelatin | alkaline protease and trypsin | [ |
| Tilapia | Gelatin peptides | properase E | [ |
| Marine collagen peptides | complex proteases | [ |
Figure 4Effects of collagen polypeptide 1 and collagen polypeptide 2 on the morphology of photoaging skin (magnification 200×). (a) normal; (b) model; (c) collagen polypeptide 1 (50 mg/kg); (d) collagen polypeptide 1 (200 mg/kg); (e) collagen polypeptide 2 (50 mg/kg); and (f) collagen polypeptide 2 (200 mg/kg). Adapted with permission from [124].
Figure 5Scheme of the hypothesized redox-dependent mechanisms of physiological effects after co-treatment of marine collagen peptides (MCPs) and skin-targeting antioxidants (AOs). Redrawn with permission from [131]. In the figure, the three arrows (blue) indicate that MCPs easily penetrate the gastrointestinal wall (GI) through blood circulation and are mainly deposited in the skin. The single arrow (green) indicates that AOs are partially metabolized. However, AOs can reach the different layers of skin. While circulating in the blood, MCPs activate blood phagocytes (i.e., granulocytes (G) and monocytes (M)) and endotheliocytes (E) to generate reactive oxygen species (ROS) and reactive nitrogen species (RNS) by provoking Toll-like receptor-4 (TLR4)-mediated signals. Co-administered antioxidants can prevent systemic oxidative stress by blocking glutathione (GSH) oxidation, and activation of glutathione peroxidase (GPx), glutathione-S-transferase (GST), and superoxide dismutase 3 (SOD3).