Issue 24, 2023

Preparation, identification, activity prediction, and protective effects on IR-HepG2 cells of five novel DPP-IV inhibitory peptides from protein hydrolysate of skipjack tuna dark muscles

Abstract

To produce peptides with high dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP-IV) inhibitory activity, neutrase was selected from five proteases (trypsin, neutrase, pepsin, alcalase and flavor protease) with the highest degree of hydrolysis (DH) (18.23 ± 1.08%) and DPP-IV inhibitory rate (53.35 ± 4.02%) to produce protein hydrolysate (NPH) from the dark muscles of skipjack tuna (Katsuwonus pelamis). Then, NPH-1 was isolated from NPH by gel permeation chromatography and found to possess the highest DPP-IV inhibitory rate (65.12 ± 7.94% at 0.5 mg ml−1) in the separated components (including NPH-1, NPH-2, NPH-3 and NPH-4). Subsequently, the available prediction models of tripeptides and tetrapeptides with the DPP-IV inhibitory rate were established using an artificial neural network (ANN). The RMSE (0.56 and 0.33 for the model established through collected tripeptides and tetrapeptides, respectively) and R2 (0.95 and 0.99 for the model established through collected tripeptides and tetrapeptides, respectively) of the ANN model's parameters were within acceptable limits, indicating that this model is available. Next, the ANN model was applied to predict tripeptides and tetrapeptides from the hydrolysate of skipjack tuna dark muscles, and five peptides (Ala-Pro-Pro (APP), Pro-Pro-Pro (PPP), Asp-Pro-Leu-Leu (DPLL), Glu-Ala-Val-Pro (EAVP) and Glu-Ala-Iie-Pro (EAIP)) possessing a noticeable DPP-IV inhibitory rate (with DPP-IV IC50 values of 42.46 ± 5.02, 37.71 ± 9.17, 58.85 ± 14.42, 49.94 ± 6.69 and 57.15 ± 6.13 μM, respectively) were screened from the protein hydrolysate. The above five peptides were proved to effectively promote glucose consumption in the insulin resistant-HepG2 (IR-HepG2) cell model considering that the glucose consumption rates of APP, PPP, DPLL, EAVP and EAIP treatment groups are all more than twice that of the dexamethasone group. Accordingly, mechanistic studies showed that these peptides interacted with PI3K/AKT and AMPK signaling pathways and promoted the phosphorylation of PI3K p110, AKT and AMPK (the protein expressions of PI3K p110, p-AKT and p-AMPK in APP, PPP, DPLL, EAVP and EAIP treatment groups are 1.64–2.22 fold compared with that in the dexamethasone group), thereby enhancing glucose uptake and further alleviating insulin resistance. These findings demonstrated that skipjack tuna dark muscle is a potential DPP-IV inhibitory peptide source, and five DPP-IV inhibitory peptides from its hydrolysate may exert potent anti-diabetic activity. In comparison, PPP may be the most potential active ingredient for healthy food against type 2 diabetes mellitus in the five screened peptides considering synthetically the DPP-IV inhibitory rate, bioavailability and synthesis cost.

Graphical abstract: Preparation, identification, activity prediction, and protective effects on IR-HepG2 cells of five novel DPP-IV inhibitory peptides from protein hydrolysate of skipjack tuna dark muscles

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Jul 2023
Accepted
13 Nov 2023
First published
13 Nov 2023

Food Funct., 2023,14, 10991-11004

Preparation, identification, activity prediction, and protective effects on IR-HepG2 cells of five novel DPP-IV inhibitory peptides from protein hydrolysate of skipjack tuna dark muscles

L. Meng, Y. Song, B. Zheng, Y. Zhao, B. Hong, M. Ma, Z. Wen, W. Miao and Y. Xu, Food Funct., 2023, 14, 10991 DOI: 10.1039/D3FO02948D

To request permission to reproduce material from this article, please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

If you are an author contributing to an RSC publication, you do not need to request permission provided correct acknowledgement is given.

If you are the author of this article, you do not need to request permission to reproduce figures and diagrams provided correct acknowledgement is given. If you want to reproduce the whole article in a third-party publication (excluding your thesis/dissertation for which permission is not required) please go to the Copyright Clearance Center request page.

Read more about how to correctly acknowledge RSC content.

Social activity

Spotlight

Advertisements