Title
Morphological, proximal composition, and bioactive compounds characterization of wild and cultivated amaranth (Amaranthus spp.) species
11627/519111627/5191
Author
Bojórquez Velázquez, Esaú
Velarde Salcedo, Aida Jimena
De León Rodríguez, Antonio
Jiménez Islas, Hugo
Pérez Torres, José Luis
Herrera Estrella, Alfredo Heriberto
Espitia Rangel, Eduardo
Barba de la Rosa, Ana Paulina
Abstract
"Amaranth seeds have gained renewed interest due to the presence of encrypted peptides with several biological functions, among which the inhibition of dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DPPIV) and angiotensin converting enzyme (ACE) stands out. Amaranth seeds also contain an oily fraction rich in squalene, an unsaturated hydrocarbon, which has been attributed diverse beneficial health effects. Up to date, only cultivated species have been analysed and no information exists about bioactive peptides and lipid composition of wild amaranths. The aim of this work was to carry out the morphological and biochemical comparison of cultivated species A. hypochondriacus (waxy and non-waxy cultivars) and A. cruentus with the wild species A. powellii and A. hybridus. The highest protein and fat contents were observed in A. powellii, but A. cruentus showed the highest squalene content. The electrophoretic protein profile showed differences in protein accumulation among species. In vitro gastrointestinal digestion was used to release the encrypted peptides and their inhibitory action against DPPIV and ACE activities was evaluated. Our results showed that peptides from A. hypochondriacus cv Opaca presented the highest inhibition against both DPPIV and ACE activities. This information is valuable for the design of strategies to obtain new amaranth varieties with higher nutraceutical quality."
Publication date
2018Publication type
articleDOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcs.2018.09.004Knowledge area
BIOLOGÍA MOLECULARCollections
Publisher
ElsevierKeywords
ACEBiopeptides
DPPIV
Cultivated and wild species
Squalene