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Hydrolyzed proteins from herring and salmon rest raw material contain peptide motifs with angiotensin-I converting enzyme inhibitors and resulted in lower urine concentrations of protein, cystatin C and glucose when fed to obese Zucker fa/fa rats

Abstract

The use of angiotensin-I converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors is a common strategy for treating kidney disease. Several amino acid sequences with ACE inhibiting activity are identified in filet and rest raw material from various species of fish, and fish protein hydrolysates could be of interest for possible treatment or prevention of kidney disease.

Therefore, we hypothesized that protein hydrolysates from rest raw material from herring and salmon contained ACE inhibiting motifs, and could beneficially affect typical markers for kidney function in an obesity rat model prone to developing renal failure. We identified 81 and 49 peptide sequences with known ACE inhibiting activity in herring and salmon protein hydrolysates from rest raw material, respectively. To investigate the effects of fish protein hydrolysates on markers of kidney function, obese Zucker fa/fa rats consumed diets with 25% of protein from herring (HER) or salmon (SAL) protein hydrolysate from rest raw material and 75% of protein from casein/whey, or 100% protein from casein/whey (CAS) for 4 weeks. Rats fed HER or SAL diets had lower urine concentrations (relative to creatinine) of protein, cystatin C and glucose when compared to rats fed CAS diets, with no differences between groups for serum concentrations of protein, creatinine and cystatin C. To conclude, protein hydrolysates from herring and salmon rest raw material contained several peptide sequences with known ACE inhibiting activities, and resulted in lower urine concentrations of proteins, cystatin C and glucose when fed to obese Zucker rats.

Category

Academic article

Language

English

Author(s)

  • Aslaug Drotningsvik
  • Daniela Maria Pampanin
  • Rasa Slizyte
  • Ana Carvajal
  • Ingmar Johan Høgøy
  • Tore Remman
  • Oddrun Anita Gudbrandsen

Affiliation

  • University of Bergen
  • NORCE Norwegian Research Centre AS
  • SINTEF Ocean / Fisheries and New Biomarine Industry
  • Diverse norske bedrifter og organisasjoner

Year

2018

Published in

Nutrition Research

ISSN

0271-5317

Publisher

Elsevier

Volume

52

Page(s)

14 - 21

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