Abstract

This study was designed to investigate the potential contribution of bioactive peptides to the biological activities related to the consumption of pork, beef, chicken and turkey meat following in vitro gastro-intestinal digestion. After extraction of the peptidic fractions from digested samples, the bioactivities were evaluated by in vitro antioxidant activity as well as angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV) inhibition assays. Pork and turkey meat appeared to be the best sources of antioxidant peptides. Pork was found to be the best source of DPP-IV-inhibitory peptides whereas chicken meat supplied peptides with the highest ACE-inhibitory activity. The comprehensive analysis of the peptidomic profile of digested samples was performed by nano-LC-ESI-QTOF MS/MS analysis. A total of 217, 214, 257 and 248 peptides were identified in digested pork, beef, chicken and turkey meat, respectively. Chicken and turkey meat showed the highest similarity in peptide sequences with 202 common peptides. Sixty-two peptides matched with sequences with previously demonstrated biological activity. In particular, 35 peptides showed ACE-inhibitory activity and 23 DPP-IV inhibitory activity. Twenty-two bioactive peptides were commonly released from the different types of meat. The relative amount of identified bioactive peptides were positively correlated to the biological activities of the different digested meats. Biological significanceThe present study describes for the first time a comprehensive peptide profile of four types of meat after in vitro gastro-intestinal digestion. The peptide inventory was used to identify 62 bioactive peptides with ACE- and DPPIV-inhibitory and antioxidant activities. The bioactivity analysis revealed interesting and significant differences between the studied meats. The originality of this work lay in the description of intrinsic differences in physiological functions after the ingestion of meat proteins from different species. In a context in which the current research scene relates meat consumption to the onset of chronic pathologies, this peptide profiling and bioactivity analysis shed light on the possible health benefits of peptides released from meat proteins. In fact, this paper represents a sort of detailed peptide list that may help to predict which peptides could be generated after meat intake and detectable at gastro-intestinal level. It also provides a thorough investigation of novel biological activities associated to meat protein hydrolysates, giving a new positive aspect to meat consumption.

Highlights

  • Meat is considered the best dietary source of high quality proteins due to their balanced composition in essential amino acids and their high digestibility

  • dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV) inhibitors reduce DPP-IV activity and can be useful in the management of type 2 diabetes by increasing the lifetime of incretins [7]. antioxidant peptides are interesting because they can potentially prevent or delay oxidative stress associated chronic diseases, especially in the gastro-intestinal tract where they are released from the parent proteins [8]. Numerous studies were performed on bioactive peptides derived from animal proteins

  • The hydrolysates produced by the action of digestive enzymes on chicken meat exhibited the lowest IC50 value, signifying the highest angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE)-inhibitory activity, whereas turkey meat peptidic fraction displayed the lowest inhibitory activity (Figure 2A). Peptidic fractions from pork and beef showed medium inhibitor potency and their IC50 values were not significantly different (P>0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

Meat is considered the best dietary source of high quality proteins due to their balanced composition in essential amino acids and their high digestibility. Escudero et al [14] identified two ACE64 inhibitory peptides released from titin during in vitro gastro-intestinal digestion of raw pork. These peptides showed anti-hypertensive activity in vivo [15]. The present study was designed to evaluate and compare in vitro digestibility and biological activities (antioxidant, ACE-inhibitory and DPP-IV-inhibitory activities) of cooked pork, beef, chicken and turkey meats subjected to the INFOGEST harmonized basic static in vitro digestive model. The peptidomic profiles of in vitro digested meats were determined by means of high-resolution mass spectrometry in order to correlate the possible differences in biological activities with the types and the relative amount of released bioactive peptides

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