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The bile salt content of human bile impacts on simulated intestinal proteolysis of β-lactoglobulin

Authors :
Lukasz Krupa
Robert Staroń
Krzysztof Gutkowski
Andrzej Wasik
Neil M. Rigby
Alan R. Mackie
Dorota Dulko
Adam Macierzanka
Source :
Food Research International. 145:110413
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

The gastrointestinal hydrolysis of food proteins has been portrayed in scientific literature to predominantly depend on the activity and specificity of proteolytic enzymes. Human bile has not been considered to facilitate proteolysis in the small intestine, but rather to assist in intestinal lipolysis. However, human bile can potentially influence proteins that are largely resistant to gastric digestion, and which are mainly hydrolysed after they have been transferred to the small intestine. We used purified and food-grade bovine milk β-lactoglobulin (βLg) to assess the impact of bile salts (BS) on the in vitro gastrointestinal digestion of this protein. Quantitative analysis showed that the proteolysis rate increased significantly with increasing BS concentration. The effect was consistent regardless of whether individual BS or real human bile samples, varying in BS concentrations, were used. The total BS content of bile was more important than its BS composition in facilitating the proteolysis of βlg. We also show that the impact of human bile observed during the digestion of purified βLg and βLg-rich whey protein isolate can be closely replicated by the use of individual BS mixed with phosphatidylcholine. This could validate simple BS/phosphatidylcholine mixtures as human-relevant substitutes of difficult-to-obtain human bile for in vitro proteolysis studies.

Details

ISSN :
09639969
Volume :
145
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Food Research International
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0b901705ee6aa524fce8371ab73c1fd0