| Literature DB >> 32610520 |
Anna Jakubczyk1, Monika Karaś1, Kamila Rybczyńska-Tkaczyk2, Ewelina Zielińska3, Damian Zieliński4.
Abstract
Generally, bioactive peptides are natural compounds of food or part of protein that are inactive in the precursor molecule. However, they may be active after hydrolysis and can be transported to the active site. Biologically active peptides can also be synthesized chemically and characterized. Peptides have many properties, including antihypertensive, antioxidant, antimicrobial, anticoagulant, and chelating effects. They are also responsible for the taste of food or for the inhibition of enzymes involved in the development of diseases. The scientific literature has described many peptides with bioactive properties obtained from different sources. Information about the structure, origin, and properties of peptides can also be found in many databases. This review will describe peptides inhibiting the development of current diseases, peptides with antimicrobial properties, and new alternative sources of peptides based on the current knowledge and documentation of their bioactivity. All these issues are part of modern research on peptides and their use in current health or technological problems in food production.Entities:
Keywords: antimicrobial peptides; antioxidant; bioactive peptides; metabolic syndrome; peptide inhibitors; peptides from edible insects
Year: 2020 PMID: 32610520 PMCID: PMC7404774 DOI: 10.3390/foods9070846
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Foods ISSN: 2304-8158
Figure 1Scheme of bioactive peptide preparation.
Figure 2Properties of bioactive peptides.
Peptides with different activities.
| Sequence of Peptide | Source of Peptide | Activity | IC50 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| WESLSRLLG | Ostrich egg white protein | ACE inhibitory | 46.7 µg/mL | Asoodeh et al. [ |
| Antiradical against DPPH | 15 µg/mL | |||
| Antiradical against ABTS | 130 µg/mL | |||
| Anti-superoxide radical | 150 µg/mL | |||
| Anti-hydroxyl radical | 160 µg/mL | |||
| GAA | Spotless smoothhound muscle | Antiradical against ABTS | 1.75 mg/mL | Wang et al. [ |
| SSEDIKE | Amaranth proteins | Anti-inflammatory activity | nd | Moronta et al. [ |
| NMAINPSKENLCSTFCK | Casein proteins | ACE inhibitory | 129.07 μM | Tu et al. [ |
| NLEIILR | Mare whey protein | Dipeptidyl peptidase-IV | 86.34 μM | Song et al. [ |
| GGSK | Red seaweed | α-amylase inhibitory | 2.58 mM | Admassu et al. [ |
| KKFFRAWWAPRFLK | Synthetic peptides | Inhibition of the yeast | MIC (400 μg/mL) | Shwaiki et al. [ |
| TTFHTSGY | Whey protein | ACE inhibitory | 142 μM | Villadóniga et al. [ |
| YAP | Cuttlefish muscle ( | ACE inhibitory | 6.1 µM | Balti et al. [ |
| ASPYAFGL | Mushrooms | ACE inhibitory | 1.080 × 10−7 mol/L | Zhang et al. [ |
| AREGEM | Synthetic peptide | Antioxidant | nd | Cao et al. [ |
| LAHMIVAGA | Quinoa yoghurt beverages | α-glucosidase inhibitory | 127 mg/mL | Ujiroghene et al. [ |
| HGSEPFGPR | Amaranth proteins | LOX inhibitory | 11.5 µM | Montoya-Rodríguez et al. [ |
nd—not determined.
Peptide sequences with antioxidant activity.
| Sequences of Peptide | Antioxidant Methods | Source of Peptide | Antioxidant Activity Expressed as: IC 50; % or Trolox Equivalent | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LDDPVFIH VAAGRTDAGVH | DPPH radical scavenging | fermented anchovy fish (Budu) extract | 0.84 mg/mL | Najafian and Babji [ |
| VVEVYLPR, | ORAC | egg-white | 36.09 µM | Zhang et al. [ |
| IREADIDGDGQVN, PEILPDGDHD, ASDEQDSVRL, APLEEPSSPH | DPPH radical scavenging | crucian carp | 1.78 mM | Zhang et al. [ |
| TSSSLNMAVRGGLTR, STTVGLGISMRSASVR | DPPH radical scavenging | finger millet | 80.55% | Agrawal et al. [ |
| SYPTECRMR | DPPH radical scavenging | sesame | 0.105 mg/mL | Lu et al. (2019) [ |
| QMDDQ | DPPH radical scavenging, | shrimp | 0.5 mg/mL | Wu et al. [ |
| EVGK, | Fe2+ chelating ability | duck plasma | 16.35% | Yang et al. [ |
| LAGNPHQQQQN and HNLDTQTESDV | hydroxyl radical scavenging or ROS reduction | walnut meal | - | Sheng et al. [ |
| SF and QY | protective effects on 385 H2O2-induced Chang liver cells. | - | Liang et al. [ | |
| LY, RALP and GHS | inhibited the | rapeseed | - | He et al. [ |
| WDHHAPQLR | model of Caco-2 cell monolayers and oxidative stress in HUVECs | rapeseed | - | Xu et al. [ |
| NTVPAKSCQAQPTTM, EDELQDKIHPF, QGPIVLNPWDQVKR, APSFSDIPNPIGSENSE | model of Caco-2 cell | fermented milk | - | Tonolo et al. [ |
| AGPSIVH, | DPPH radical scavenging | duck breast | 56.41% | Li et al. [ |
| LLSGTQNQPSFLSGF, NSLTLPILRYL, TLEPNSVFLPVLLH | ORAC | lentil storage proteins | 0.013 μmol TE/μmol | García-Mora et al. [ |
| AYL | ORAC | Jiuzao | 1.35 μmol TE/μmol | Jiang et al. [ |
| Peptide fractions | DPPH, | brown rice | 0.19 mM TE, | Selamassakul et al. [ |
Peptide sequence with antimicrobial activity.
| Sequence of Peptide | Source of Peptide | Antimicrobial Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| RYRRKKKMKKALQYIKLLKE | synthetic peptide, analog from peptide 20,628 (321RYRRKKKMKKKLQYIKLLKE340) | inhibit growth of | Barreto-Santamaría et al. [ |
| ASHLGHHALDHLLK |
| inhibit growth of | Cusimano et al. [ |
| MRGSHHHHHHGSSGENLYFQSL | synthetic peptide | inhibit growth of | Cusimano et al. [ |
| GIWKKWIKKVVNVLKNLF-NH2 | hybride peptides (KABT-AMP/Uperin 3.6) | inhibit growth of | Lum et al. [ |
| GIWKKWIKKWLNVLKNLF-NH2 | hybride peptides (KABT-AMP/Uperin 3.6) | inhibit growth of | Lum et al. [ |
| KTCENLADTYKGPPPFFTTG |
| inhibit HIV reverse transcriptase activity | Patrick et al. [ |
| KTCENLADTY |
| inhibit HIV reverse transcriptase activity | Wong and Ng [ |
Peptide sequence with ACE inhibitor active.
| Sequence of Peptide | Source of Peptide | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| KHV |
| ACE inhibitory | Jia et al. [ |
| ASL |
| ACE inhibitory | Wu et al. [ |
| GNPWM |
| ACE inhibitory | Tao et al. [ |
Bioactive peptides obtained from seafood by-products.
| Sequence of Peptide | Source of Peptide | Activity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Seafood by-products | |||
| GASSGMPG | ACE inhibitory | Ngo et al. [ | |
| IVDR | olive flounder ( | ACE inhibitory | Oh et al. [ |
| LSGYGP | tilapia ( | ACE inhibitory | Chen et al. [ |
| LWHTH | tunicate ( | ACE inhibitory | Kang et al. [ |
| YP | Atlantic salmon | DPP-IV inhibitory | Neves et al. [ |
| WEGPK | Bluefin leatherjacket ( | antioxidant | Chi et al. [ |
| GSGGL | antioxidant | Chi et al. [ | |
| GPDGR | skipjack tuna ( | antioxidant | Yang et al. [ |
| GIV | tilapia ( | antioxidant | Thuanthong et al. [ |
| GIPGAP | thornback ray ( | antioxidant | Lassoued et al. [ |
| PYSFK | grass carp ( | antioxidant | Cai et al. [ |
| Plants and seeds | |||
| ADGF | Wild hazelnut ( | antioxidant | Liu et al. [ |
| LAYLQYTDFETR | pecan meal | antioxidant | Hu et al. [ |
| SMRKPPG | peony ( | antioxidant | Zhang et al. [ |
Figure 3Risk factors of metabolic syndrome.