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Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects

Cereals and legumes are key components of a healthy and balanced diet. Accordingly, many national nutritional guidelines emphasize their health promoting properties by placing them at the base of nutritional food pyramids. This concept is further validated by the observed correlation between a lower...

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Autores principales: Malaguti, Marco, Dinelli, Giovanni, Leoncini, Emanuela, Bregola, Valeria, Bosi, Sara, Cicero, Arrigo F. G., Hrelia, Silvana
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4264216/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25405741
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms151121120
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author Malaguti, Marco
Dinelli, Giovanni
Leoncini, Emanuela
Bregola, Valeria
Bosi, Sara
Cicero, Arrigo F. G.
Hrelia, Silvana
author_facet Malaguti, Marco
Dinelli, Giovanni
Leoncini, Emanuela
Bregola, Valeria
Bosi, Sara
Cicero, Arrigo F. G.
Hrelia, Silvana
author_sort Malaguti, Marco
collection PubMed
description Cereals and legumes are key components of a healthy and balanced diet. Accordingly, many national nutritional guidelines emphasize their health promoting properties by placing them at the base of nutritional food pyramids. This concept is further validated by the observed correlation between a lower risk and occurrence of chronic diseases and the adherence to dietary patterns, like the Mediterranean diet, in which cereal grains, legumes and derived products represent a staple food. In the search for a dietary approach to control/prevent chronic degenerative diseases, protein derived bioactive peptides may represent one such source of health-enhancing components. These peptides may already be present in foods as natural components or may derive from hydrolysis by chemical or enzymatic treatments (digestion, hydrolysis or fermentation). Many reports are present in the literature regarding the bioactivity of peptides in vitro and a wide range of activities has been described, including antimicrobial properties, blood pressure-lowering (ACE inhibitory) effects, cholesterol-lowering ability, antithrombotic and antioxidant activities, enhancement of mineral absorption/bioavailability, cyto- or immunomodulatory effects, and opioid-like activities. However it is difficult to translate these observed effects to human. In fact, the active peptide may be degraded during digestion, or may not be absorbed or reach the target tissues at a concentration necessary to exert its function. This review will focus on bioactive peptides identified in cereals and legumes, from an agronomical and biochemical point of view, including considerations about requirements for the design of appropriate clinical trials necessary for the assessment of their nutraceutical effect in vivo.
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spelling pubmed-42642162014-12-12 Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects Malaguti, Marco Dinelli, Giovanni Leoncini, Emanuela Bregola, Valeria Bosi, Sara Cicero, Arrigo F. G. Hrelia, Silvana Int J Mol Sci Review Cereals and legumes are key components of a healthy and balanced diet. Accordingly, many national nutritional guidelines emphasize their health promoting properties by placing them at the base of nutritional food pyramids. This concept is further validated by the observed correlation between a lower risk and occurrence of chronic diseases and the adherence to dietary patterns, like the Mediterranean diet, in which cereal grains, legumes and derived products represent a staple food. In the search for a dietary approach to control/prevent chronic degenerative diseases, protein derived bioactive peptides may represent one such source of health-enhancing components. These peptides may already be present in foods as natural components or may derive from hydrolysis by chemical or enzymatic treatments (digestion, hydrolysis or fermentation). Many reports are present in the literature regarding the bioactivity of peptides in vitro and a wide range of activities has been described, including antimicrobial properties, blood pressure-lowering (ACE inhibitory) effects, cholesterol-lowering ability, antithrombotic and antioxidant activities, enhancement of mineral absorption/bioavailability, cyto- or immunomodulatory effects, and opioid-like activities. However it is difficult to translate these observed effects to human. In fact, the active peptide may be degraded during digestion, or may not be absorbed or reach the target tissues at a concentration necessary to exert its function. This review will focus on bioactive peptides identified in cereals and legumes, from an agronomical and biochemical point of view, including considerations about requirements for the design of appropriate clinical trials necessary for the assessment of their nutraceutical effect in vivo. MDPI 2014-11-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4264216/ /pubmed/25405741 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms151121120 Text en © 2014 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Malaguti, Marco
Dinelli, Giovanni
Leoncini, Emanuela
Bregola, Valeria
Bosi, Sara
Cicero, Arrigo F. G.
Hrelia, Silvana
Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects
title Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects
title_full Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects
title_fullStr Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects
title_full_unstemmed Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects
title_short Bioactive Peptides in Cereals and Legumes: Agronomical, Biochemical and Clinical Aspects
title_sort bioactive peptides in cereals and legumes: agronomical, biochemical and clinical aspects
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4264216/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25405741
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms151121120
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