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Original Articles

Ace Inhibition and Enzymatic Resistance In Vitro of a Casein Hydrolysate Subjected to Plastein Reaction in the Presence of Extrinsic Proline and Ethanol- or Methanol-Water Fractionation

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Pages 386-398 | Received 23 Jul 2011, Accepted 28 Oct 2011, Published online: 03 Oct 2013
 

Abstract

Casein was hydrolyzed by alcalase to a degree of hydrolysis of 10.9% to obtain a hydrolysate having ACE-inhibition in vitro with an IC50 value of 52.6 μg/mL. The prepared hydrolysate was modified by alcalase-catalyzed plastein reaction with extrinsic proline added at 0.4 mol/mol free amino groups (on the basis of the hydrolysate), and fractionated by ethanol- or methanol-water solvents in proportions of 3:7, 5:5, or 7:3 (v/v), respectively. With the decrease of free amino groups of the modified hydrolysate as the response, the optimized plastein reaction conditions were alcalase addition of 3.1 kU/g peptides, substrate concentration of 50% (w/v), and reaction temperature of 25°C. Four modified hydrolysates prepared with different reaction times exhibited higher ACE-inhibitory activities than the original hydrolysate. The evaluation results showed that solvent fractionation of the modified hydrolysate with the maximum activity (IC50 = 13.0 μg/mL) yielded the separated soluble fraction's higher activity but the precipitate fraction's lower one. Further enzymatic digestion of the modified hydrolysate with the maximum activity and its two fractionated products by four proteases in vitro caused damage to the activities, but the residual activities of the final digests were higher than that of the original hydrolysate, indicating that the plastein reaction could confer casein hydrolysate protease resistance.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was funded by the Innovative Research Team of Higher Education of Heilongjiang Province (Project No. 2010td11) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Project Nos. 30972132 and 31140009). The authors wish to thank the anonymous reviewers and the editors for their valuable work and suggestions to this article.

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