Foods (Dec 2022)

How Discoloration of Porcine Cruor Hydrolysate Allowed the Identification of New Antifungal Peptides

  • Aurore Cournoyer,
  • Jacinthe Thibodeau,
  • Laila Ben Said,
  • Zain Sanchez-Reinoso,
  • Sergey Mikhaylin,
  • Ismail Fliss,
  • Laurent Bazinet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/foods11244035
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 24
p. 4035

Abstract

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Porcine blood is an important by-product from slaughterhouses and an abundant source of proteins. Indeed, cruor, the solid part of blood, is mainly composed of hemoglobin. Its enzymatic hydrolysis with pepsin generates a diversity of peptides, particularly antimicrobials. One of the downsides of using these hydrolysates as food bio-preservatives is the color brought by the heme, which can be removed by discoloration. Nonetheless, the effects of this procedure on the antimicrobial peptide population have not been completely investigated. In this study, its impacts were evaluated on the final antibacterial and antifungal activities of a cruor hydrolysate. The results demonstrated that 38 identified and characterized peptides showed a partial or total decrease in the hydrolysate, after discoloration. Antifungal activities were observed for the raw and discolored hydrolysates: MICs vary between 0.1 and 30.0 mg/mL of proteins, and significant differences were detected between both hydrolysates for the strains S. boulardii, C. guilliermondii, K. marxianus, M. racemosus and P. chrysogenum. The raw hydrolysate showed up to 12 times higher antifungal activities. Hence, peptides with the highest relative abundance decrease after discoloration were synthesized and tested individually. In total, eight new antifungal peptides were characterized as active and promising. To our knowledge, this is the first time that effective antifungal peptide sequences have been reported from porcine cruor hydrolysates.

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