Abstract

BackgroundOral administration of bioactive peptides has potential clinical advantages, but its applicability is limited due to gastric and pancreatic enzyme proteolysis.ObjectiveTo examine whether the co-packaging of bovine colostrum (BC), a rich source of IgG, immune and growth factors, with the food additives trehalose (carbohydrate), stearine (fat), casein (protein present in BC) or soy flour (plant based with high protease inhibitory activity) enhances the stability of BC against digestion.DesignSamples alone and in combination (BC+ 10% wt/wt trehalose, stearine, casein or soy) were exposed to HCl/pepsin, followed by trypsin and chymotrypsin (“CT”). Assessment of proliferation used gastric AGS cells (Alamar blue), IgG function measured bovine IgG anti-E.coli binding and ELISAs quantified growth factor constituents. In vivo bioassay assessed ability of BC alone or with soy to reduce injury caused by dextran sodium sulphate (DSS, 4% in drinking water, 7 days, test products started 2 days prior to DSS).ResultsProliferative activity of BC reduced 61% following HCl/pepsin and CT exposure. This was truncated 50% if soy was co-present, and also protected against loss of total IgG, IgG E.coli binding, TGFβ, lactoferrin and EGF (all P<0.01 vs BC alone). Co-packaging with trehalose was ineffective in preventing digestion whereas casein or stearine provided some intermediate protective effects. Rats given BC alone showed beneficial effects on weight gain, disease activity index, tissue histology and colonic MPO. Soy alone was ineffective. BC+ soy combination showed the greatest benefit with a dose of 7 mg/kg (6.4 BC + 0.6 soy flour) having the same degree of benefit as using 20 mg/kg BC alone.ConclusionSoy, and to a lesser extent casein, enhanced the biostability of BC against digestive enzymes. Co-packaging of BC with other food products such as soy flour could result in a decreased dose being required, improving cost-effectiveness and patient compliance.

Highlights

  • Use of orally administered growth factors given in isolation or as composites are hampered due to digestion by luminal proteases

  • Proliferative activity of Bovine colostrum (BC) reduced 61% following HCl/pepsin and CT exposure

  • Co-packaging with trehalose was ineffective in preventing digestion whereas casein or stearine provided some intermediate protective effects

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Summary

Introduction

Use of orally administered growth factors given in isolation or as composites are hampered due to digestion by luminal proteases. 20g/day to overcome this proteolytic issue [e.g., 6] This results in relatively high cost if used for prolonged periods as a preventative therapy and prevents the use of capsule formulations which are limited to a content of approx. Acid resistant capsules can be used to protect against HCl/pepsin digestion, and act a barrier so that the active product does not encounter the stomach mucosa None of these approaches are helpful if exposure of wide areas of the gut are preferred, such as reducing the gut damaging effects of NSAIDs on the stomach and on the small and large intestine, where acid suppressants are ineffective and may exacerbate intestinal injury [7] or chemotherapy induced mucositis which affects the entire GI tract. Oral administration of bioactive peptides has potential clinical advantages, but its applicability is limited due to gastric and pancreatic enzyme proteolysis

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