| Literature DB >> 33810450 |
Fred Kwame Ofosu1, Dylis-Judith Fafa Mensah2, Eric Banan-Mwine Daliri1, Deog-Hwan Oh1.
Abstract
The prevalence of metabolic syndrome (MetS) is presently an alarming public health problem globally. Oxidative stress has been postulated to be strongly correlated with MetS, such as type 2 diabetes, obesity, hypertension, cardiovascular diseases, and certain cancers. Cereals are important staple foods which account for a huge proportion of the human diet. However, owing to recent growing demand and the search for natural antioxidants for the prevention and management of MetS, cereal peptides have gained increasing attention for developing functional ingredients or foods with substantial antioxidant properties. This review explores the current production techniques for cereal peptidic antioxidants and their potential mechanism of action in the prevention and management of MetS.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant peptides; cereal grains; functional food; metabolic syndrome; oxidative stress
Year: 2021 PMID: 33810450 PMCID: PMC8066008 DOI: 10.3390/antiox10040518
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Some proposed definitions of oxidative stress throughout the course of time.
| Definition of Oxidative Stress | Reference |
|---|---|
| Oxidative stress is a disturbance in the prooxidant–antioxidant balance in favor of the former. | [ |
| Oxidative stress is defined as a disturbance in the prooxidant–antioxidant balance that leads to potential damage. | [ |
| Oxidative stress is a situation when steady-state ROS concentration is transiently or chronically enhanced, disturbing cellular metabolism, its regulation, and damaging cellular constituents. | [ |
| Oxidative stress is defined as excess production of reactive oxygen species (ROS) relative to antioxidant defense. | [ |
| Oxidative stress refers to the imbalance between cellular antioxidant cascade and processes that generate reactive oxygen species (ROS), such as superoxide (O2.), hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), and hydroxyl anion (OH−). | [ |
| Oxidative stress is defined as an imbalance between oxidants and antioxidants in favor of the oxidants, leading to a disruption of redox signaling and control and/or molecular damage. This implies a deviation to the opposite side of the balance (thus, “reductive stress”), as well as physiological and supraphysiological deviations, which tie into the overarching concept of “oxidative distress” and “oxidative eustress”, respectively. | [ |
Figure 1Classifications of oxidative stress adapted with permission from Sies et al. [4]. Copyright 2017 Annual Reviews, Inc.
Types/Levels of oxidative stress.
| Oxidative Stress | Definition | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Acute | The inability of cells to neutralize enhanced ROS level over a period of time, such that the time is enough to result in specific physiological consequences. | [ |
| Chronic | It occurs when acute oxidative stress progresses to significantly disturb homeostasis. Here, the ROS levels are elevated and very stable, and very potent in altering healthy cell components. | [ |
| Quasi-stationery | It occurs when ROS levels are so elevated that it is almost impossible to return to ideal homeostatic levels, thus resulting in the need for a substantial reorganization of the entire homeostatic system. | [ |
Figure 2Association between oxidative stress and MetS. ROS: reactive oxygen species; RNS: reactive nitrogen species; RHS: reactive halogen species; RSS: reactive sulfur species; RSeS: reactive selenium species; RCS: reactive carbonyl species; RES: reactive electrophile species; CVD: cardiovascular diseases.
Major assortments of cereals-specific genus.
| Cereal | Family | Sub-Family | Tribe | Genus | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat | Gramineae or Poaccac |
| Triticeae | Triticale | [ |
| Rye |
| Triticinae | Triticale | [ | |
| Barley | Hordeinae | Triticale | [ | ||
| Oat | Aveneae | Aveneae | [ | ||
| Millet | Paniceae | Panicease | [ | ||
| Sorghum | Andropogoneae | Sorghum | [ | ||
| Maize | Maydeae | Zea | [ | ||
| Rice | Oryzeae | Oryza | [ |
Chemical assay showing some examples of cereal antioxidant peptides.
| Protein Source | Enzyme | Peptide Sequence/Hydrolysate | Size | Assay Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat bran | Alcalase | NL, QL, FL, HAL, AAVL, AKTVF, and TPLTR | <1, 1–10 kDa, (membrane ultrafiltration) | Higher ORAC by <1 kDa fraction. | [ |
| Wheat bran | Alcalase, favourzyme, papain, neutral enzyme, trypsin | CGFPGHC, QAC, RNF, SSC, WF | <1 kDa, (size-exclusion and and ion-exchange chromatography) | QAC and SSC from alcalase hydrolysate showed the highest superoxide anion radical scavenging and Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity. | [ |
| Wheat germ | Alcalase, pepsin or proteinase K | KELPPSDADW, SGGSYADELVSTAK, GNPIPREPGQVPAY | <2.5 kDa, (RP-HPLC) | Pepsin fraction showed the strongest ABTS and DPPH radical scavenging activity. | [ |
| Wheat gluten | Pepsin | LQPGQGQQG, AQIPQQ | <5 kDa, (ion-exchange and gel filtration chromatography) | Fraction 3 showed stronger antioxidant activity using ferric thiocyanate method. | [ |
| Wheat germ | proteinase K | SGGSYADELVSTAK, MDATALHYENQK | <3 kDa, (RP-HPLC) | This fraction displayed strong ABTS and DPPH radical scavenging activity. | [ |
| Wheat gluten | Alcalase | Hydrolysate | Not determined | Heat and alcalase treated hydrolysate synergistically increased DPPH and ABTS radical scavenging inhibition. | [ |
| Rice bran | Alcalase, Trypsin, Protamex, Flavourzyme | Hydrolysate | N.R | Flavourzyme hydrolysate exhibited the strongest DPPH, ABTS radical scavenging and metal chelating activity. | [ |
| Rice bran | Trypsin | YSK | <1 kDa, (gel filtration, RP-HPLC) | F2-a fraction displayed strong DPPH radical scavenging and reducing power activity | [ |
| Brown rice | Bromelain | GSGVGGAK, SSVGGGSAG, FGGSGGPGG, FGGGGAGAGG, GGGGGAAAAGA, AGGGGGGVVAG, SGPSGGGGAL, ESDVVSDL | <1 kDa, (ultra, gel filtration, RP-HPLC) | DPPH, ABTS, and hydroxyl radical-scavenging activities was higher in F4 fraction. | [ |
| Brown rice | Bromelain | SPFWNINAHS, MPVDVIANAYR, VVYFDQTQAQA, AVYVYDVNNNANQ, YNILSGFDTEL, EFFDVSNELFQ | <1.5 kDa, (ultra, gel filtration, RP-HPLC) | F4 fraction of glutelin hydrolysates showed the highest ABTS radical scavenging and Cu2+ chelating activity. | [ |
| Rice bran | Pepsin, Trypsin | N.R | 3–10 kDa, (ultra, gel filtration, RP-HPLC) | F2 sub-fraction displayed the highest DPPH, ABTS radical scavenging and Fe2+ chelating activity. | [ |
| White and colored rice | Alcalase, Flavourzyme, Neutrase | Hydrolysate | <10 kDa | Alcalase hydrolysate of immature rice showed the highest DPPH and Fe2+ chelating activity compared to matured rice. | [ |
| Rice | Pepsin-Pancreatin | Hydrolysate | N.R | Methionine-supplemented hydrolysates showed enhanced scavenging capacities for ABTS, superoxide, and nitric oxide. | [ |
| Rice bran | pepsin-trypsin | N.R | <3 kDa, ultrafiltration | Higher ABTS radical scavenging and metal chelating activities in F1 fragment. | [ |
| Rice | Alcalase, Flavourzyme | Hydrolysate | <3 kDa | Alcalase hydrolysate showed higher DPPH and FRAP activities and, hence, improved oxidative stability of linseed oil during storage. | [ |
| Rice | Microbial proteases | Hydrolysate | 1–3 kDa, ultrafiltration | Validase and alkaline protease F3 fractions exerted remarkable DPPH and ABTS radical scavenging abilities. Validase-F3 | [ |
| (Validase®, Neutral Protease, alkaline protease). | (500 µg/g) inhibited lipid oxidation by 19 and 15% at days 8 and 15 of storage, respectively. | ||||
| Rice residue protein | Alcalase, Flavourzyme, Protamex, Pepsin, Trypsin, Papain | RPNYTDA, TSQLLSDQ, TRTGDPFF, NFHPQ | <1 kDa, ultrafiltration, SEC, RP-FPLC | RRPB3 fraction showed the strongest DPPH, ABTS radical scavenging and FRAP-Fe3+ reducing activities. Synergistic activity was displayed by RRPB3 I and III. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal | Neutrase | Hydrolysate | - | Hydrolysate (5 mg mL−1) inhibited lipid oxidation in emulsion by reducing hydroperoxides and TBARS formation. | [ |
| Corn germ meal | Alcalase | MGGN, MNN, MEN | <1 kDa, (ultra, gel filtration) | F3 fraction from hydrolysate-5 displayed higher DPPH, ABTS radical scavenging, and ORAC activities. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal and distillers’- dried grains with solubles (DDGS) | Neutrase, | Hydrolysate | - | Neutrase-hydrolyzed corn gluten meal (2%) displayed the strongest oxidation prevention in ground meat and significantly reduced TBARS in pig feed. Alcalase-hydrolyzed DDGS retarded the lipid oxidation by 37.8%. | [ |
| Alcalase | |||||
| Corn protein isolate | Microbial protease (Validase, Alkaline, Neutral) | Hydrolysate | <1–10 kDa, (ultrafiltration) | Neutral protease fraction (NP-F3) demonstrated the highest ORAC peroxyl radicals scavenging activity. NP-F3 (250 and 500 µg/g) remarkably inhibited lipid oxidation by 52.9% in ground beef. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal | Alcalase, Protamex | QQPQPW | <1 kDa (ultra, gel filtration and RP-HPLC). | Alcalase hydrolysate displayed the highest antioxidant activity. Hexapeptide showed remarkable DPPH, ABTS, and hydroxyl radical scavenging activity, but weaker Fe2+-chelating capacity. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal | Alcalase, | YPQ, AYL | <1 kDa (ultra, gel filtration and RP-HPLC) | Alcalase hydrolysates and GI-resistant peptides exhibited higher DPPH, hydroxyl radical scavenging and reduced power activity. | [ |
| Pepsin, pancreatin | |||||
| Corn gluten meal | Papain, Ficin, Bromelain | Hydrolysate | <1 kDa, >10 kDa (ultra, gel filtration) | Papain F4 fraction, ficin F1 fraction, and bromelain F3 fraction showed the strongest DPPH and ABTS radical scavenging and metal chelating activity. Papain F4 fraction (1000 mg/kg) reduced lipid oxidation in ground meat by 30.45%. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal | Alcalase, Flavourzyme, Alcalase + Flavourzyme and Flavourzyme + Alcalase | CSQAPLA, YPKLAPN, YPQLLPNE | <1 kDa (ultra, gel filtration and RP-HPLC | Alcalase + Flavourzyme hydrolysate exhibited better antioxidant activities. CSQAPLA displayed the highest DPPH and superoxide anion radical scavenging capacities, and good reducing power activity. | [ |
| Sorghum | Alcalase | VAITLTMK, VSKSVLVK | <1 kDa, (ultra, gel filtration, RP-UFLC) | These peptides displayed the highest DPPH radical scavenging activity. | [ |
| Sorghum | Alcalase | QQWQ, QWQQ | <5–10 kDa, (ultra, gel filtration) | Medium-sized hydrolysate fraction exhibited stronger antioxidant activities based on DPPH, ABTS, metal chelating, and reducing power assay. The fraction also exerted remarkable lipid oxidation inhibition, both in emulsion and in the ground meat system. | [ |
| Finger millet | Trypsin, pepsin | TSSSLNMAVRGGLTR, STTVGLGISMRSASVR | <3 kDa, (ultra, gel filtration and RP-UFLC) | Trypsin fraction GFB exhibited the highest DPPH and ABTS radical scavenging activity. In silico interaction of serine and threonine residues with free radicals potentially resulted in antioxidant activity. | [ |
| Sorghum | Papain | LRQQ, QLQGV, WQPN, GLQDL, AMCGVV, YLRQ, TPCATS, QGVAAA, AQVAQ, QQLQ | 1–3 kDa (ultrafiltration and gel filtration) | Kafirin hydrolysates (1.0 mg/g) inhibited TBARS formation by 32.1% in meat samples. Fraction F3 also exhibited the highest % of DPPH radical scavenging activity, metal chelating and ORAC activity. | [ |
| Sorghum | Alcalase, flavourzyme, neutrase, everlase, protamex, papain, ficin, bromelain, trypsin, Pepsin | Neutrase hydrolysate fractions | 3–10 kDa (ultra and gel filtration) | Neutrase F2 hydrolysates fraction displayed higher antioxidant activities (DPPH, ORAC, metal chelating) and retarded lipid autoxidation and peroxidation in the meat model. | [ |
ORAC: oxygen radical absorbance capacity; GI: gastrointestinal; TBARS: thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; N.R: not reported.
Cereal antioxidant peptides using different processing methods.
| Protein Source | Processing Method | Peptide | Assay Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat germ protein hydrolysates | Electron beam irradiation (EBI) | <1 kDa | Irradiation at 50 kGy increased DPPH and ABTS+ radical scavenging activity by 45.77% and 52.52%, respectively. | [ |
| Wheat germ | Fermentation with | N.R | Peptide content increased in fermented samples compared to non-fermented samples and resulted in an increase in DPPH radical scavenging, Fe2+ chelating and Fe3+ reducing power activities. | [ |
| KAMUT® Wheat | Combination of enzyme hydrolysis (Alcalase, Neutrase, Flavourzyme) and fermentation with (Lactobacillus spp. strains) | VLPPQQQY | Stronger superoxide anion, hydroxyl radicals, organic nitro-radicals (ABTS, DPPH) scavenging, and lipid peroxidation inhibition was observed. | [ |
| Wheat germ | Subcritical water extraction | GPFGPE, FGE, <1 kDa | Peptide fraction 4 showed the strongest DPPH radical scavenging activity and could effectively cross Caco-2 intestinal epithelium cells. | [ |
| Sorghum | Ultrasonication combined with pepsin-pancreatin hydrolysis | <1 kDa | Ultrasonication increased DH, DPPH scavenging activity and ORAC values. However, there was no improvement in NO scavenging activity. | [ |
| Rice dregs | Angling method using metal-organic framework combined with alcalase hydrolysis. | GDMNP, LLLRW | Strong DPPH, superoxide anion, hydroxyl radical scavenging and Fe2+ chelating activity was exhibited by peptides. | [ |
| Rice | Alcalase-assisted electron beam irradiation (EBI) | Hydrolysate | EBI treatment at 50 kGy improved DPPH (96.81%) and ABTS (92.04%) radical scavenging activity. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal | Ultrasonication assisted alcalase hydrolysis | SGV, LPF, LLPH, LLPF, FLPF, AHL, LGV (<1 kDa) | Ultrasonic pretreatment (5 W/L, 2 s/2 s on/off, 50 °C, and 25 min) significantly increased DH, DPPH and hydroxyl radical scavenging activity and enhanced formation of small size peptides. | [ |
Cellular antioxidant effects of cereal peptides and hydrolysates.
| Protein Source | Enzyme | Peptide Sequence/Hydrolysate | Cellular Model | Cellular Outcome | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat germ | Trypsin, Alcalase | AREGETVVPG | Vascular smooth muscle cells | High glucose-induced cell growth and generation of intracellular ROS was significantly decreased by AOP (5 µM). Suppression of PKCζ, AKT and Erk1/2 phosphorylation, and inhibition of Nox4 protein expression by AOP (5 µM). | [ |
| Wheat germ | neutral protease | ADWGGPLPH | Vascular smooth muscle cells | High glucose-induced cell proliferation and intracellular ROS generation was significantly reduced by peptide at 10 µM and 20 µM. Stimulation of AMPK activity, inhibition of PKCζ, AKT and Erk1/2 phosphorylation, and suppression of NOX4 protein expression. | [ |
| Wheat gluten protein | Alcalase | Protein hydrolysate | Human peripheral blood mononuclear cells | Hydrolysate (0.5 mg/mL) directly scavenged free radicals, increased GSH levels, reduced NO overproduction, and, thus, enhanced cells’ antioxidant capacity. Also, cell proliferation, Th1 and Th17 pro-inflammatory cytokines IFN-γ and and IL-17 were reduced. | [ |
| Foxtail millet | Alcalase | PFLF, IALLIPF | Human keratinocyte HaCaT cells | ROS, MDA production was effectively reduced and GSH levels increased by MPP (300 µg/mL) in H2O2-induced HaCaT cells. | [ |
| Sorghum | Pepsin-pancreatin | Kafirin hydrolysate | THP-1 human macrophages | Kafirin (100 μg/mL) reduced LPS-induced intracellular ROS production, inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α) production, and nuclear translocation of p65 and c-JUN. | [ |
| Rice bran | - | KHNRGDEF | Human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) | H2O2-induced HUVECs oxidant injury was protected by rice bran peptide (0.1 mM) supplementation via TLR4 binding, pathway inhibition, and suppression of NF-κB activation. | [ |
| Rice | - | OP60 commercial peptide | HepG2 cells | H2O2- or APAP-induced HepG2 cytotoxicity was reduced by 5 mg/mL OP60 pretreatment via glutathione homeostasis restoration and increased mRNA expression of antioxidant enzymes. | [ |
| Corn | Alcalase | Zein hydrolysate/peptides | HepG2 cells | Hydrolysate showed higher ORAC activity than native proteins. Peptides (1155.56–1781.63 ng/mL IC50) induced apoptosis at 24 hr by increasing caspase 3 expression. | [ |
| Corn germ meal | Alcalase | MGGN, MNN, MEN | HepG2 cells | Peptides (0.2 mM) significantly reduced ROS generation in H2O2-induced HepG2 cells. MNN showed the highest cellular antioxidant activity. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal | Alcalase | corn gluten hydrolysate (CGH1) <1 kDa | HepG2 cells | CGH1-pretreated cells at 2.5 mg/mL upregulated the genes GPX3, GPX5, SOD3, CYGB, SEPP1, and MT3 involved in antioxidant defense. CGH1 suppressed EPHX2 expression, increased cellular EETs, EET-phospholipids formation, and, thus, protected against H2O2-induced HepG2 cell damage. | [ |
| Corn gluten meal | Alcalase | GLLLPH | HepG2 cells | Corn peptide fractions (CPF) at 2.50 mg/mL exhibited high cellular antioxidant activities and increased the levels of intracellular antioxidant enzymes (SOD, CAT, GR and GSH) in oxidized HepG2 cells. | [ |
ROS: reactive oxygen species; AOP: antioxidant peptide; NOX: NADPH oxidase; PKCζ: phospho-protein kinase ζ; AMPK: AMP-activated protein kinase; Erk: extracellular signal–related kinase; AKT: Th1: Type 1 T helper; Th17: Type 17 T helper; IFN-γ: interferon-γ; IL17: interleukin 17; GSH: reduced glutathione; GR: glutathione reductase; SOD: superoxide dismutase; CAT: catalase; NO: nitric oxide; MDA: malondialdehyde; MPP: millet prolamins peptides; LPS: lipopolysaccharide; TLR4: Toll-like receptor 4; EET: epoxyeicosatrienoic acid.
Antioxidant effects of cereal-derived peptides and hydrolysates in animal models.
| Protein Source | Peptide/Hydrolysate | Purpose of Study | In Vivo Outcome | BSA-Based Human Equivalent Dose (mg/kg) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wheat bran | NL, QL, FL, HAL, AAVL, AKTVF, and TPLTR | Investigated the blood pressure lowering effects of wheat protein hydrolysates and peptides in spontaneous hypertensive rats (SHR). | Oral administration of <1 kDa peptides at 100 mg/kg showed a better reduction of systolic blood pressure (−35 mmHg) after 6 h compared to hydrolysate (−20 mmHg). | 16.22 | [ |
| Wheat bran | LRP, LQP | Evaluated the effects of peptides on oxidative stress and the AMPK signaling pathway in HFD-induced NASH C57BL/6 mice. | NASH mice treated with 0.20% LRP showed a remarkable decrease in serum d-ROM and a significant increase in BAP levels. Administration of 0.20% LQP increased phospho-AMPK expression and decreased phospho-ACC expression, thus alleviating the severity of NASH. | 7.46 | [ |
| Wheat bran | ADWGGPLPH | Assessed the antioxidative and antidiabetic vascular dysfunction effects of peptide in STZ-induced C57BL/6 mice. | Administered peptide at 4mg/kg enhanced SOD expression and total antioxidant capacity, and also attenuated hyperglycemia-induced inflammatory factors, such as TNF-α and IL-1β. | 0.32 | [ |
| Rice | OP60 commercial peptide | Evaluated the protective effect of OP60 against APAP-induced hepatic injury in mice. | GSH synthesis and antioxidant enzymes were induced by OP60 (500 mg/kg) via activation of the Nrf2 pathway. | 40.54 | [ |
| Corn Gluten meal (CGM) | CGM peptides (<10 kDa) | Investigated the antioxidant capacity of CGMP produced by solid–state fermentation with | Serum and liver antioxidant enzymes (SOD, catalase, glutathione peroxidase) and total antioxidant capacity activities increased, with a decrease in MDA in D-galactose-induced aging rats fed CGMP (250 mg/kg bw). | 40.54 | [ |
| Corn germ meal | Albumin peptides fractions (APF-4) | Examined the hepatoprotective effects of APF-4 in alcohol-induced liver injury in mice. | APF-4 (800 mg/kg bw) administration significantly reduced activities and levels of hepatic (AST), ALT and MDA, and increased activities of SOD, CAT and GSH. | 64.86 | [ |
HFD: high-fat diet; AMPK: AMP-activated protein kinase; NASH: non-alcoholic steatohepatitis; d-ROM: diacron reactive oxygen metabolite; BAP: biological antioxidant potential; ACC: acetyl-CoA carboxylase; STZ: streptozotocin; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor α; IL-1β: interleukin-1β; Nrf2: nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; acetaminophen: APAP; SOD: superoxide dismutase; CAT: catalase; GSH-Px: glutathione peroxidase; MDA: malondialdehyde, BSA: body surface area. Human equivalent dose (HED) based on BSA was calculated according to the formula suggested by Reagan-Shaw et al. [181].
Figure 3Cereal peptidic antioxidants production strategies.