Publications by authors named "Fidel Toldra"

Fermented sausages are popular meat products with many different varieties. The aroma of fermented sausages depends on the metabolic activities of microbiota, mainly involving lactic acid bacteria and catalase-positive cocci, the group of coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS) in particular. Regarding staphylococci, this work elucidated their generation of aroma precursors from hydrolase, metabolic activities contributing to aroma development, antioxidant effects that improve aroma via preventing excessive lipid oxidation.

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Article Synopsis
  • Recent increases in meat production have harmful effects on the environment, highlighting the need for better use of meat by-products.
  • The study focuses on improving enzymatic hydrolysis of pork liver using ultrasound and thermal pretreatments to enhance the production of beneficial bioactive peptides and flavors.
  • Results show that ultrasound treatment significantly boosts the release of umami and taste-related amino acids, along with increasing antioxidant activity in pork liver hydrolyzates, suggesting its potential as a functional ingredient.
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  • * Different pre-treatments, including pepsin hydrolysis and ultrasounds-assisted pepsin hydrolysis, significantly increased the degree of hydrolysis and the release of free amino acids, leading to a richer peptide profile.
  • * A total of 995 peptides were identified, with 20 predicted to contribute to various health benefits such as antioxidant, antihypertensive, and antidiabetic effects, highlighting the potential for beef liver hydrolysates to offer multifunctional bioactivities.
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  • * The review covers seven key areas of ultrasonic application: curing, tenderization, emulsification, freezing, thawing, sterilization, and flavor enhancement, with examples and explanations of mechanisms.
  • * The cavitation effect caused by ultrasound is highlighted as a crucial factor that boosts processing efficiency and improves the quality of meat products.
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In the study of protein-rich byproducts, enzymatic hydrolysis stands as a prominent technique, generating bioactive peptides. Combining exo- and endopeptidases could enhance both biological and sensory properties. Ultrasound pretreatment is one of the most promising techniques for the optimization of enzymatic hydrolysis.

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Alcoholic liver injury has become a leading threat to human health, with complicated pathogenesis and limited therapeutic options. Our previous study showed that peptides (MSPs) exhibit protective potential against early-stage alcoholic liver injury, although the underlying mechanism is not yet clear. In this study, histopathological analysis, mRNA abundance of injury-associated biomarkers, the gut microbiota, and faecal metabolome were evaluated using a mouse model subjected to acute alcohol exposure, aiming to identify the mechanism by which MSP can alleviate alcoholic hepatotoxicity.

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This study reports the effect of thermal pretreatment and the use of different commercial proteolytic enzymes (Protamex, Flavourzyme, Protana prime, and Alcalase) on the free amino acid content (FAA), peptide profile, and antioxidant, antidiabetic, antihypertensive, and anti-inflammatory potential (DPPH, FRAP, and ABTS assay, DPP-IV, ACE-I, and NEP inhibitory activities) of dry-cured ham bone hydrolyzates. The effect of in vitro digestion was also determined. Thermal pretreatment significantly increased the degree of hydrolysis, the FAA, and the DPP-IV and ACE-I inhibitory activities.

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In this study, the effects of ultrasound-assisted enzymatic hydrolysis on the extraction of anti-inflammatory peptides from porcine bone collagen were investigated. The results showed that ultrasound treatment increased the content of α-helix while decreased β-chain and random coil, promoted generation of small molecular peptides. Ultrasound-assisted enzymatic hydrolysis improved the peptide content, enhanced ABTS radical scavenging and ferrous ion chelating ability than non-ultrasound group.

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The increase in world population has generated a higher demand for quality proteins, increasing the production in meat industry but also the generation of thousands of tons of by-products, with a negative economic and environmental impact. The valorisation of slaughterhouse by-products by giving by-products a new use as food ingredient is one of the best strategies to add value while reducing environmental damage. Flavour is one of the most influential parameters in the purchasing decision of consumers, and in meat products it is mostly influenced by the content in free amino acids and nucleotides.

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The typical dry-cured ham flavor is rich in umami and brothy perceptions, for which short peptides may contribute. Particularly, γ-glutamyl peptides could be the responsible of these previously reported attributes, as they exert a synergistic interaction with other basic tastes and modify the intensity of salty, sweet, and umami tastes. The content of peptides has been reported to evolve along the processing, but no kokumi γ-glutamyl peptides have been identified in Spanish dry-cured hams yet.

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Heterocyclic aromatic amines (HAAs) are detrimental substances can develop during the high-temperature cooking of protein-rich foods, such as meat. They are potent mutagens and carcinogens linked to an increased risk of various cancers. HAAs have complex structures with nitrogen-containing aromatic rings and are formed through chemical reactions between amino acids, creatin(in)e, and sugars during cooking.

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The food enzyme triacylglycerol lipase (triacylglycerol acylhydrolase; EC 3.1.1.

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Salting is a crucial step during the production of dry-cured ham and it is not well known whether it has an impact on the generation of taste-active peptides. The present study focused on the quantitation of kokumi γ-glutamyl peptides in low-salted Spanish dry-cured hams with 12 months of processing. By using mass spectrometry, peptides were quantitated from samples obtained after ethanolic deproteinization-based and non-ethanolic deproteinization-based extraction methods.

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The utilization of animal bones as a protein source could be used as a sustainable pathway for the production of bioactive compounds. In this study, bones were pretreated with pepsin enzyme (PEP) and then sequentially hydrolyzed with Alcalase (PA) and Alcalase, as well as Protana prime (PAPP). The degree of hydrolysis, antioxidant activity, and DPP-IV inhibitory activity were measured.

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Background: As major industrial poultry by-products, chicken feet are considered as notable sources of several bioactive molecules. The current work covers the processing of chicken feet proteins as substrates to be hydrolysed by combinations of three commercial enzymes (Alcalase®, Flavourzyme® and Protana® Prime) during different hydrolysis periods and the evaluation of the identified peptides having antioxidant activity after simulated gastrointestinal digestion.

Results: Enzymatic hydrolysis with Alcalase® and Protana® Prime combination for 4 h resulted in the highest activities.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study examined how ultrasound affects the peptide profiles and flavor of unsmoked bacon using peptidomics and bioinformatics methods.
  • - Ultrasound treatment increased the activity of key proteases, leading to more peptides and better flavor when using up to 500 W, according to taste prediction analysis.
  • - However, using excessive ultrasound power (750 W) was detrimental, reducing peptide generation and negatively impacting flavor, suggesting that controlled ultrasound is a promising method for improving bacon taste.
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Alcohol-induced liver injury has become a leading risk for human health, however, effective strategies for the prevention or treatment are still lacking. Hence, the present study explored the potential of Musculus senhousei as a source of hepatoprotective peptides against alcoholic liver injury using in vitro, in vivo and in silico methods. Results indicated that Musculus senhousei peptides (MSP, extracted by simulated gastrointestinal digestion of cooked mussel) exhibited notable antioxidant (ABTS and DPPH assays) and alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) stabilizing activity in vitro.

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Dry-cured pork products, such as dry-cured ham, undergo an extensive proteolysis during manufacturing process which determines the organoleptic properties of the final product. As a result of endogenous pork muscle endo- and exopeptidases, many medium- and short-chain peptides are released from muscle proteins. Many of them have been isolated, identified, and characterized, and some peptides have been reported to exert relevant bioactivity with potential benefit for human health.

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This Special Issue of the is focused on bioactive peptides in foods or hydrolyzates of food by-products, the methods for the extraction and purification of bioactive peptides, their structural and functional characterization, and the mechanisms of action that regulate their activity and support the reported health benefits [...

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Unbalanced oxidative reactions occurred during the dry-curing period of ham can trigger unpleasant taste. Additionally, salt might mediate in these reactions that cause the oxidation of some of the generated peptides acting as a pro-oxidant. The influence of the processing and oxidation on the release of peptides and bioactivity have been dimly investigated.

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Blood is a meat by-product rich in proteins with properties that can be improved after hydrolysis, making it a sustainable alternative for use in the generation of bioactive peptides. The objective of this study was to identify dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPP-IV) inhibitory peptides obtained from different chicken blood hydrolysates prepared using combinations of four different enzymes. Best results were observed for AP (2% Alcalase + 5% Protana Prime) and APP (2% Alcalase + 5% Protana Prime + 3% Protana UBoost) hydrolysates obtaining inhibition values of 60.

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The aim of this study was to investigate the modifications of the proteome and flavor-related proteins in unsmoked bacon resulting from ultrasound treatment with the application of label-free quantitation technology together with bioinformatics analysis. Results showed that the expression levels of 137 proteins were markedly affected by ultrasound with most of them being significantly upregulated. The proteins distributed in the cytoplasm and the cytosol, the mitochondrion, and the nucleus were more susceptible to ultrasound treatment.

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