4.6 Article

Sunflower Protein Hydrolysates Reduce Cholesterol Micellar Solubility

Journal

PLANT FOODS FOR HUMAN NUTRITION
Volume 64, Issue 2, Pages 86-93

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11130-009-0108-1

Keywords

Sunflower; Protein hydrolysate; Bioactive peptides; Cholesterol solubility

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry of Education and Science [AGL 2004-03930, AGL 2005-01120]
  2. EU

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Plant protein hydrolysates are a source of bioactive peptides. There are peptides that decrease the micellar cholesterol solubility from bile acids and therefore may reduce in vivo cholesterol absorption. The presence of these peptides in sunflower protein hydrolysates has been studied. Sunflower protein hydrolysates produced with alcalase plus flavourzyme or with pepsin plus pancreatin inhibited in some degree the cholesterol incorporation to micelles. Protein hydrolysates generated after 30 min of hydrolysis with alcalase, and after 30 min of hydrolysis with pepsin, were the inhibitoriest of the cholesterol incorporation to micelles. The average amino acid hydrophobicity of inhibitory peptides in cholesterol micelles was higher than the observed in the corresponding protein hydrolysates. This high hydrophobicity probably favours their inclusion in the lipid micelles. In vivo, this inhibition may translate in a decrease of cholesterol absorption. Reported results show that a combination of different characteristics such as peptide size or hydrophobicity may be responsible of the inhibitory activity of generated peptides.

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