Peptidomic Characterization and Amino Acid Availability after Intake of Casein vs. a Casein Hydrolysate in a Pig Model.

Nutrients

Instituto de Investigación en Ciencias de la Alimentación, CIAL (CSIC-UAM, CEI UAM+CSIC), Nicolás Cabrera, 9, 28049 Madrid, Spain.

Published: February 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Casein hydrolysis speeds up gastrointestinal transit compared to intact casein, but the digest composition remains unclear.
  • The study aims to analyze duodenal digests from pigs fed micellar casein versus hydrolyzed casein, using plasma amino acid levels for comparison.
  • Results showed slower nitrogen transit with micellar casein, a broader range of peptide sizes in casein digests, and significant differences in peptide profiles, with more abundant opioid sequences in casein digest.

Article Abstract

It is known that casein hydrolysis accelerates gastrointestinal transit in comparison to intact casein, although the effect of the protein hydrolysis on the composition of the digests is not fully understood. The aim of this work is to characterize, at the peptidome level, duodenal digests from pigs, as a model of human digestion, fed with micellar casein and a previously described casein hydrolysate. In addition, in parallel experiments, plasma amino acid levels were quantified. A slower transit of nitrogen to the duodenum was found when the animals received micellar casein. Duodenal digests from casein contained a wider range of peptide sizes and a higher number of peptides above five amino acids long in comparison with the digests from the hydrolysate. The peptide profile was markedly different, and although β-casomorphin-7 precursors were also found in hydrolysate samples, other opioid sequences were more abundant in the casein digests. Within the same substrate, the evolution of the peptide pattern at different time points showed minimal changes, suggesting that the protein degradation rate relies more on the gastrointestinal location than on digestion time. Higher plasma concentrations of methionine, valine, lysine and amino acid metabolites were found in animals fed with the hydrolysate at short times (<200 min). The duodenal peptide profiles were evaluated with discriminant analysis tools specific for peptidomics to identify sequence differences between both substrates that can be used for future human physiological and metabolic studies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10005447PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15051065DOI Listing

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