| Literature DB >> 30784272 |
Tomoko Asai1,2, Akira Takahashi3, Kumie Ito4, Tatsuo Uetake5, Yasuki Matsumura6, Kaori Ikeda7, Nobuya Inagaki7, Masahiro Nakata8, Yoshiharu Imanishi8, Kenji Sato1.
Abstract
Objectives of the present study were to evaluate amounts of collagen in Japanese daily dishes and contents of food-derived collagen peptides in human blood. The meat in one serving of most Japanese daily dishes contains 0.2-2.5 g of collagen, except for beef tendon, eel with skin, and skinned shark tail (7.6-13.3 g). After ingestion of cooked shark meat, nine collagen di- and tripeptides were detected in plasma and the area under the curve of most peptides, except for Hyp-Gly and Pro-Hyp-Gly, was ∼30% of that after ingestion of collagen hydrolysate containing an equivalent amount of collagen. Likewise, only ∼30% of the total collagen in the meat was liberated into solution by pepsin and pancreatin digestion. Thus, ingestion of collagen-rich meat increases the collagen peptides in blood, which depends on not only the collagen content in the meat but also the susceptibility of the collagen/gelatin to digestive endoproteinases.Entities:
Keywords: Japanese food; collagen; collagen peptide; gelatin; human trial; meat
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30784272 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.8b06896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279