Poultry Science (Oct 2020)

Production and characterization of chicken blood hydrolysate with antihypertensive properties

  • W. Wongngam,
  • T. Mitani,
  • S. Katayama,
  • S. Nakamura,
  • J. Yongsawatdigul

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 99, no. 10
pp. 5163 – 5174

Abstract

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Chicken blood has limited utilization despite its high protein content. Production of a blood hydrolysate exhibiting angiotensin I-converting enzyme (ACE)–inhibitory activity would be means of valorizing chicken blood. The optimized conditions used to produce chicken blood corpuscle hydrolysate (BCH) by Alcalase were 51.1°C, 4% enzyme, and pH 9.6 for 6 h, resulting in a 35.8% degree of hydrolysis and 37.7% ACE inhibition at a peptide concentration of 0.2 mg/mL. The permeate of a 1-kDa membrane, BCH-III, showed a 2.5-fold increase in ACE inhibition compared with that of BCH. BCH-III was resistant to in vitro gastrointestinal digestion, whereas the BCH digesta exhibited an increased ACE-inhibitory activity after digestion. Both BCH and BCH-III were rich in hydrophobic amino acids. A single administration of BCH and BCH-III to spontaneously hypertensive rats at concentrations of 600 and 100 mg/kg, respectively, lowered the systolic blood pressure by −57.7 and −70.9 mmHg, respectively, 6 h after oral administration compared with the control group. The blood pressure–lowering effect of the 600 mg/kg BCH dose was comparable with that of the 100 mg/kg BCH-III dose after 4 wk of oral administration. Both BCH and BCH-III could be developed for use as nutraceutical products with antihypertensive effects.

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