• Title/Summary/Keyword: Fish gelatin hydrolysate

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Comparison of Antioxidative Activity on Fish and Bovine Skin Gelatin Hydrolysates Produced in a Three-Step Membrane Enzyme Reactor (3단계 막효소반응기에서 연속적으로 생산된 어피 및 우피 젤라틴 가수분해물의 항산화활성 비교)

  • 김세권;박표잠;송병권;김종배
    • KSBB Journal
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    • v.15 no.6
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    • pp.635-643
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    • 2000
  • To compare the antioxidative activities of fish skin and bovine skin gelatin hydrolysate, gelatin hydrolysates from Alaska pollack and bovine skin were prepared by various enzymatic hydrolysis methods (1st step, Alcalase; 2nd step, pronase E; 3rd step, collagenase) using a continuous three-step membrane reactor. The molecular weight distributions of the 1st, 2nd and 3rd step hydrolysates were 7∼10 kDa, 2∼5 kDa and 0.7∼0.9 kDa, respectively. The antioxidative activity of fish skin gelatin hydrolysate was stronger than that of bovine skin gelatin hydrolysate, and in particular, both of 2nd step hydrolysates showed more antioxidative activity than hydrolysates of any other step. The optimum antioxidative activity concentration of the 2nd step hydeolysates of fish and boving skin were 1% (w/w) in a linoleic acid water-alcohol emulsion. In cultured cells exposed to t-butyl hydroperoxide (t-BHP), the 2nd step hydrolysate of fish skin gelatin delayed cell death most. These results suggest that the antioxidative activity of fish skin gelatin hydrolysate is higher than that of bovine skin gelatin hydrolysate because of their different amino acid contents.

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Fractionation of Gelatin Hydrolysates with Antioxidative Activity from Alaska Pollock Surimi Refiner Discharge

  • Park, Chan-Ho;Kim, Hyung-Jun;Kang, Kyung-Tae;Park, Joo-Dong;Heu, Min-Soo;Park, Jae-W.;Kim, Jin-Soo
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.12 no.3
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    • pp.163-170
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    • 2009
  • This study was conducted to obtain the gelatin fraction with a high anti oxidative activity from Alaska pollock surimi by-products using a two-step enzymatic hydrolysis and ultrafiltration. Among gelatin hydrolysates from refiner discharge of Alaska Pollock surimi, the highest antioxidative activity (81.5%) resulted from gelatin hydrolysate sequentially treated with Pronase E and Flavourzyme each for 2 hr. However, no difference was seen in the anti oxidative activity of the second hydrolysate (Pronase E-/Flavourzyme-treated hydrolysate) when compared to the permeate fractionated through a 10-kDa membrane. The results suggest that the Pronase E-/Flavourzyme-treated hydrolysate from refiner discharge gelatin of Alaska pollock surimi can be used as a supplementary raw material for improving health functionality.

Functional Properties of Fish Skin Gelatin Hydrolysate from a Continuous Two-Stage Membrane Reactor (2단계 막반응기에서 연속적으로 생산된 어피젤라틴 가수분해물의 기능성)

  • Kim, Se-Kwon;Byun, Hee-Guk;Jeon, You-Jin;Cho, Duck-Jae
    • Applied Biological Chemistry
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    • v.37 no.2
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    • pp.85-93
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    • 1994
  • The fish skin gelatin hydrolysates were produced using a continuous two-stage membrane (MWCO 10,000, MWCO 5,000) reactor, and molecular weights, amino acids and functional properties of the hydrolysates were investigated. The major molecular weights distribution of the major fractions were $8{\sim}10\;KDa$ and $4.5{\sim}6.5\;KDa$ in the 1st-step hydrolysates, $2{\sim}6\;KDa$ and $0.5{\sim}2\;KDa$ in the 2nd-step hydrolysates. Among the amino acids in the hydrolysates, glycine, proline, serine, alanine, hydroxyproline, glutamic acid and aspartic acid having sweet taste were responsible for $68{\sim}72%$ of the total amino acids. But valine, methionine, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine and histidine having a bitter taste were only $23{\sim}25%$ Taste evaluations show that the gelatin hydrolysates have a brothy and sweet taste, 2nd-step hydrolysate have more a favorable taste than 1st-step hydrolysate. The hydrolysates were completely soluble and clear over the entire pH range. Moisture sorption at intermediate water activities of the 2nd-step hydrolysate was much higher than the unmodified fish skin gelatin, but foaming and emulsification properties were poor. Buffer capacity of the 2nd-step hydrolysate was higher than the fish skin gelatin and 1st-step hydrolysate, while viscosities of the hydrolysates were lower than the fish skin gelatin.

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Antioxidant and ACE Inhibiting Activities of the Rockfish Sebastes hubbsi Skin Gelatin Hydrolysates Produced by Sequential Two-step Enzymatic Hydrolysis

  • Kim, Hyung-Jun;Park, Kwon-Hyun;Shin, Jun-Ho;Lee, Ji-Sun;Heu, Min-Soo;Lee, Dong-Ho;Kim, Jin-Soo
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.14 no.1
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    • pp.1-10
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    • 2011
  • This study was conducted to obtain hydrolysates with potent antioxidative activity from rockfish skin gelatin. Gelatin was extracted under high temperature/high pressure using a two-step enzymatic hydrolysis with commercial enzymes such as Alcalase, Flavourzyme, Neutrase, and Protamex. The second rockfish-skin gelatin hydrolysate (SRSGH) was prepared by further incubating the first gelatin hydrolysate (FRSGH), which had been hydrolyzed with Alcalase for 1-h (FRSGH-A1), with Flavourzyme for 2-h (SRSGH-F2). The second gelatin hydrolysate showed higher antioxidative activity of 3.72 as measured by a Metrohm Rancimat and superior angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibiting activity of 0.82 mg/mL. Compared with the gelatin, the relative proportion in SRSGH-F2 was markedly decreased in the 100-kDa peak, whereas it was increased in that less than 100-kDa. The amino acid composition of SRSGH-F2 was rich in glycine (25.9%), proline (10.8%), alanine (9.1%), and glutamic acid (9.1%). In contrast, it was poor in cystine (not detected), methionine (1.6%), tyrosine (0.4%), hydroxylysine (0.9%), and histidine (0.9%). In recent years, demand for natural functional foods has been increasing, and SRSGH-F2 can be used as a functional food ingredient in the food industries. However, further detailed studies on SRSGH-F2 with regard to its antioxidant activity in vivo and the various antioxidant mechanisms are needed.

Fractionation and Angiotensin I-converting Enzyme (ACE) Inhibitory Activity of Gelatin Hydrolysates from by-products of Alaska Pollock Surimi

  • Park, Chan-Ho;Kim, Hyung-Jun;Kang, Kyung-Tae;Park, Jae-W.;Kim, Jin-Soo
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.12 no.2
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    • pp.79-85
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    • 2009
  • Gelatin hydrolysates with a high inhibitory activity against angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE) were fractionated from Alaska pollock surimi refiner discharge. The ACE-inhibitory activity, expressed as $IC_{50}$ (mg/mL), was highest (0.49 mg/mL) in gelatin hydrolysates formed by sequential 2-hr treatments of Pronase and Flavourzyme. After fractionation through four different membrane filters with molecular weight cut-offs of 3, 5, 10, and 30 kDa, the highest ACE-inhibitory activity (0.21 mg/mL) was observed with the 3-kDa filtrate.

Partial Purification of Antioxidative Peptides from Gelatin Hydrolysates of Alaska Pollock Surimi Refiner Discharge

  • Heu, Min-Soo;Park, Chan-Ho;Kim, Hyung-Jun;Park, Jae-W.;Kim, Jin-Soo
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.12 no.4
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    • pp.249-257
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    • 2009
  • This study is conducted to partially purify an antioxidative peptide in a two-step gelatin hydrolysate from Alaska pollock surimi refiner discharge, which was obtained by sequential treatment with Pronase E and Flavourzyme. The two-step gelatin hydrolysate was fractionated using chromatographic methods. Based on the same protein concentration of each fraction, the antioxidative activities (85.1-95.4%) of positive fractions fractionated by ion-exchange chromatography were higher than those (27.2-87.8%) from gel filtration. Then, further purification of the positive fractions was performed. Among them, the partially purified A1C1L2G1 and A1C1L2G2 fractions showed 96.2% and 85.1% inhibition, respectively, of linoleic acid peroxidation. The A1C1L2G1 fraction was composed of 15 kinds of amino acids and the predominant amino acids were proline, glycine and alanine. The results obtained in this study suggested that the fraction partially purified through chromatographic methods from the two-step gelatin hydrolysate of Alaska pollock surimi refiner discharge could be useful as a supplementary source for improving health functionality.

Fractionation and Characterization of Fractions with High Antioxidative Activity from the Gelatin Hydrolysates of Korean Rockfish Sebastes schlegelii Skin

  • Kim, Hyung-Jun;Park, Kwon-Hyun;Shin, Jun-Ho;Lee, Ji-Sun;Heu, Min-Soo;Lee, Dong-Ho;Kim, Jin-Soo
    • Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.14 no.3
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    • pp.168-173
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    • 2011
  • The purpose of this study was to obtain a fraction with high antioxidative activity from second rockfish gelatin hydrolysates (SRSGHs), which were hydrolyzed with Alcalase and Flavourzyme through ultrafiltration membranes with serial digestions for 1 and 2 h, respectively, and to investigate the feasibility of this fraction as a potential functional food ingredient. Among various fractions that were ultrafiltered from the SRSGH with four types of membrane (1, 5, 10, and 30 kDa), the SRSGH-III fraction, which permeated the 10 kDa membrane but not the 5 kDa membrane, showed the highest antioxidant activity (protection factor=5.13) and angiotensin-I-converting enzyme-inhibiting activity ($IC_{50}$=0.82 mg/mL). These results suggest that the SRSGH-III fraction from the SRSGH can be used as a functional food ingredient. However, further studies examining its antioxidant activity in vivo as well as the different antioxidant mechanisms are needed.

Proteolytic Conditions for the Hydrolysate of Flounder Skin Gelatin (효소에 의한 가자미피 젤라틴 가수분해물의 제조 조건)

  • 강태중;양현필;김세권;송대진
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.21 no.4
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    • pp.398-406
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    • 1992
  • In order to develop a new flavourant using the fish skin gelatin, the proteolytic renditions for the gelatin hydrolysate of the alkali (B-type) and Alcalase (E-type) pretreated flounder (Limanda aspera) skin gelatin were investigated, and some physical properties, molecular weight and amino acid compositions of the hydrolysates were, also, compared with each other. The proteolytic conditions of the gelatins (B-type and E-type) by trypsin were as follows : reaction temperature, 55$^{\circ}C$ : pH, 9.0 : enzyme concentration, 0.1% : re-action time, 4hrs for B-type and 1 hr for E-type. The degrees of hydrolysis of the B-type and E-type gelatin un-der the renditions stated above were 63% and 82%, respectively. The rnajor molecular weights of the hydrolysates were 15,000 dalton for B-type and 12,400 dalton for E-type. Among the amino acids in the hydrolysates, glycine, alanine, proline, hydroxyproline and serine having a sweet taste were responsible for 57% of the total amino acid. But valine, leucine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, methionine, arginine and histidine having a bitter taste were only 18%.

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Processing and Biological Activity of Gelatin Hydrolysate from Branchiostegus japonicus Scales (옥돔(Branchiostegus japonicus) 비늘 유래 젤라틴의 가수분해 및 가수분해물의 기능성)

  • Ahn, Yong-Seok;Lee, Won-Woo;Lee, Seung-Hong;Ahn, Gin-Nae;Ko, Chang-Ik;Oh, Chang-Kyung;Oh, Myung-Cheol;Kim, Dong-Woo;Jeon, You-Jin;Kim, Soo-Hyun
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.42 no.5
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    • pp.417-425
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    • 2009
  • The potential utility of fish scales to the functional food industry has been investigated due to its antioxidant and antihypertensive characteristics. In this study, we report on the reactive oxygen species (ROS) scavenging and angiotensin I converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitory activities of gelatin hydrolysates processed from Branchiostegus japonicus scales, which are also high in protein content (about 46.1%). We prepared the enzymatic gelatin hydrolysates with four proteases (${\alpha}$-chymotrypsin, Alcalase, Neutrase and trypsin) from B. japonicus scale gelatin, which was prepared according to different reaction times, substrate/enzyme ratios and substrate concentrations. The enzymatic hydrolytic degrees of the gelatin increased time-dependently up to 6 hrs, while the Alcalase gelatin hydrolysates showed the highest hydrolysis degrees compared to the others. Furthermore, gelatin hydrolysates of Neutrase and ${\alpha}$-chymotrypsin showed the highest DPPH radical and $H_2O_2$ scavenging activities ($IC_{50}$ value; 9.18 mg/mL and 9.74 mg/mL), respectively. However, the activities were not significant (P<0.05). We also observed that the four gelatin hydrolysates significantly increased ACE inhibitory activities from approximately 20% to 60% (P<0.05), Among them, the Alcalase gelatin hydrolysates showed the higher ACE inhibitory activity ($IC_{50}$ value; 0.73 mg/mL) compared to the others. These results suggest that the enzymatic gelatin hydrolysates prepared from B. japonicus scales may possess a potentially useful function as an ACE inhibitory agent. As such, the utility of B. japonicus scales should be given due consideration for application in the functional food industry.

Isolation and Characterization of Antioxidative Peptides from Enzymatic Hydrolysates of Yellowfin Sole Skin Gelatin (가자미피 젤라틴 가수분해물로부터 항산화성 펩티드의 분리${\cdot}$정제 및 특성)

  • KIM Se-Kwon;LEE Hyun-Chel;BYUN He-Guk;JEON Yon-Jin
    • Korean Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences
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    • v.29 no.2
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    • pp.246-255
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    • 1996
  • To develop a natural antioxidative peptide, the gelatin was extracted from fish (Yellowfin sole) skin by hot $water(50^{\circ}C)$ extraction method and hydrolyzed with Alcalase, pronase and collagenase through a continuous 3-step membrane reactor. Each step enzymatic hydrolysates were determined the antioxidative activity and their synergistic effects, compared with $\alpha-tocopherol$ and butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT). Also, we tried to investigate the antioxidative disposition of peptide which was successfully separated by gel filtration, ion-exchange chromatography, and HPIC in cultured rat hepatocytes intoxicated with tert-butyl hydroperoxide (TBHP). Second step enzymatic hydrolysate (SSEH) among all hydrolysates and $\alpha-tocoperol$ was showed the strongest antioxidative activity. The optimum concentration of antioxidative activity for SSEH was $1\%(w/w)$ in linoleic acid. The synergistic effects were increased in using the hydrolysate with tocopherol and BHT. In the presence of the peptide isolated from SSEH, supplemented hepatocytes exposed to TBHP showed that delayed cell killing and decreased significantly the lipid peroxidation, compared with hepatocytes not cultured with isolated peptide.

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