Abstract

This study investigated the influence of flaxseed oil cyclolinopeptides (CLs) on lipid and protein oxidation during high-fat meat digestion. Fourteen CLs were identified in flaxseed oil through UHPLC-ESI-QTOF-MS/MS, with dominant CLA, CLB, CLE, and CLM. During in vitro digestion, CLs inhibited lipid oxidation products (lipid hydroperoxide, Malondialdehyde, and 4-hydroxynonenal) and protein carbonylation. Compared to other groups, the lipid (16.28 ± 0.35) and protein (17.5 ± 0.6) oxidation was significantly inhibited, and antioxidant activity was remarkably increased when the CLs content reached 200 mg/kg. Through untargeted lipidomic analysis using Q-Exactive, it was observed that CLs mitigated the formation of oxidized triglycerides (OxTG) products and enhanced the hydrolysis of lipids to generate sphingolipid and polyunsaturated fatty-acids enriched glycerophospholipids imparting nutritional value to meat. Electron spin-resonance and fluorescence quenching showed that primary radicals such as alkyl and alkoxy radicals during high-fat meat digestion with flaxseed oil CLs significantly mitigate their formation. These findings collectively indicate that consuming CLs enriched flaxseed oil could reduce lipid oxidation and enhance the nutritional value of high-fat meat during digestion.

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