| Literature DB >> 30200502 |
Cynthia Chatterjee1,2, Stephen Gleddie3, Chao-Wu Xiao4,5.
Abstract
Soy consumption has been associated with many potential health benefits in reducing chronic diseases such as obesity, cardiovascular disease, insulin-resistance/type II diabetes, certain type of cancers, and immune disorders. These physiological functions have been attributed to soy proteins either as intact soy protein or more commonly as functional or bioactive peptides derived from soybean processing. These findings have led to the approval of a health claim in the USA regarding the ability of soy proteins in reducing the risk for coronary heart disease and the acceptance of a health claim in Canada that soy protein can help lower cholesterol levels. Using different approaches, many soy bioactive peptides that have a variety of physiological functions such as hypolipidemic, anti-hypertensive, and anti-cancer properties, and anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and immunomodulatory effects have been identified. Some soy peptides like lunasin and soymorphins possess more than one of these properties and play a role in the prevention of multiple chronic diseases. Overall, progress has been made in understanding the functional and bioactive components of soy. However, more studies are required to further identify their target organs, and elucidate their biological mechanisms of action in order to be potentially used as functional foods or even therapeutics for the prevention or treatment of chronic diseases.Entities:
Keywords: bioactives; biomarkers; chronic diseases; functional property; soy peptides; soy protein
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30200502 PMCID: PMC6164536 DOI: 10.3390/nu10091211
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Soy bioactive peptides and their properties.
| Soy Protein Source | Bioactive Peptide | Properties | Tested Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| βCG | YVVNPDNDEN | Hypocholesterolemic | HepG2 human liver cells | [ |
| YVVNPDNNEN | ||||
| LAIPVNKP | ACE inhibition | In vitro ACE inhibitory activity assay | [ | |
| LPHF | ||||
| βCG | Soymetide-13: MITLAIPVNKPGR | Immunostimulating | Male ICR mice and fMLP receptor binding assay; | [ |
| Soymetide-9: MITLAIPVN | [ | |||
| Soymetide-4: MITL | ||||
| KNPQLR; EITPEKNPQLR; RKQEEDEDEEQQRE | FAS inhibitor | FAS inhibition studies; 3T3-L1mouse adipocyte | [ | |
| βCG | Soymorphin-5: YPFVV | Anti-diabetic | Guinea pig ileum assay opioid activity; | [ |
| Soymorphin-6: YPFVVN | Elevated Plus-Maze Test in Male ddY Mice | |||
| Soymorphin-7: YPFVVNA | Male BALB/c and ddY mice | |||
| VRIRLLQRFNKRS | Appetite suppressant | Male BALB/c and ddY mice; | [ | |
| Glycinin | IAVPGEVA | Hypocholesterolemic | HMGR activity assay; | [ |
| IAVPTGVA | [ | |||
| LPYP | [ | |||
| VLIVP | ACE inhibition | ACE inhibitory assay | [ | |
| SPYP | ||||
| WL | ||||
| SFGVAE | Hypocholesterolemic | HMGR activity | [ | |
| HCQRPR | Phagocytosis stimulatory peptide | Macrophages; | [ | |
| QRPR | ||||
| Glycinin (A4 and A5) | LPYPR | Hypocholesterolemic | Mice at dose of 50 mg/kg for 2 days; | [ |
| NWGPLV | ACE inhibition | Spontaneously Hypertensive model rats | [ | |
| Lunasin | SKWQHQQDSCRKQKQ | Antioxidative | Suppression of skin papilloma development in SENCAR mice by acting as an antimitotic agent; | [ |
| Bowman-Birk Inhibitor | Anti-cancer | 50% reduction in the frequency of chromosomal abnormalities and sister chromatid exchange in blood syndrome patients; Shrink precancerous lesions in the mouth that lead to oral cancer called leukoplakia in humans in Phase I and II clinical trials; | [ | |
| Vglycin | Anti-diabetic | Normalize fasting glucose and restore pancreatic function in Type 2 diabetic Wistar rats | [ | |
| Glycinin, βCG-α, βCG-α’, βCG-β, Trypsin Inhibitor & Lipoxygenase | KA | Triglyceride-lowering | HepG2 cells; | [ |
| Glycinin, Trypsin Inhibitor & Lipoxygenase | VK | |||
| Glycinin, βCG-α, βCG-α’, βCG-β & Lipoxygenase | SY | |||
| Defatted soy protein | X-MLPSYSPY | Anti-cancer | Arrest P388D1 mouse monocyte macrophages at G2/M phase to block cell cycle progression | [ |
| Soy protein | YVVFK; | Hypotensive | Spontaneously hypertensive rats | |
| Anti-inflammatory | Postmenopausal women; ApoE knockout mice | [ | ||
| WGAPSL; VAWWMY; FVVNATSN | Hypocholesterolemic | Rats; HepG2 cells | [ | |
| Soybean | PGTAVFK | Hypotensive | IC50 = 26.5 µM | [ |
| IVF; LLF; LNF; LSW; LEF | ACE inhibition | ACE inhibitory activity assay and UPLC-MS/MS | [ | |
| Flavouzyme®-treated soy protein isolate | ILL; LLL; VHVV | Lipolysis | 3T3-L1 mouse adipocytes | [ |
| Chymotrypsin Korean fermented soybean paste | HHL | Hypotensive | Spontaneously hypertensive rats | [ |
| Genetically modified soybean protein | LLPHH; RPLKPW | Antioxidative; Antihypertensive | [ | |
| Black soybean protein | IQN | Adipogenesis inhibition | 3T3-L1 mouse adipocytes | [ |
| Soymilk | RQRK; VIK | Anti-inflammatory | RAW 264.7 mouse macrophages | [ |
| Protease (PROTIN SD-NY10) treated soy milk | FFYY; WHP; FVP; LHPGDAQR; IAV; VNP; LEPP; WNPR | ACE inhibition | ACE inhibitory activity assay | [ |
| Fermented soybean, Bacillus natto or subtilis | VAHINVGK | ACE inhibitory activity assay and simulated gastrointestinal digestion | [ | |
| YVWK | ||||
| Fermented soybean seasoning | SY | Spontaneously hypertensive rats | [ |