Collagen as a source of bioactive peptides: A bioinformatics approach
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Keywords

Additive in cosmetics
Additive in foods
Bioactive peptides
Bioinformatic tools
Bovine collagen
Clustering
Collagen domains
Collagen hydrolysate
Porcine collagen
Salmon collagen
Scaffold materials
Type I collagen

How to Cite

1.
Nuñez SM, Guzmán F, Valencia P, Almonacid S, Cardenas C. Collagen as a source of bioactive peptides: A bioinformatics approach. Electron. J. Biotechnol. [Internet]. 2021 Jan. 8 [cited 2024 Sep. 19];48. Available from: https://preprints.pucv.cl/index.php/ejbiotechnology/article/view/2020.09.009

Abstract

Background: Collagen is the most abundant protein in animals and can be obtained from residues of the food industry. Its hydrolysate has many desirable properties that make it suitable as an additive in foods and cosmetics, or as a component of scaffold materials to be used in biomedicine.

Results: We report here the characterization of type I collagen from five different sources, namely bovine, porcine, chicken, trout and salmon, as well as their hydrolysates by means of bioinformatics tools. As expected, the results showed that bovine and porcine collagen, as well as trout and salmon collagen, can be used interchangeably due to their high identity. This result is consistent with the evolution of proteins with highly identical sequences between related species. Also, 156 sequences were found as potential bioactive peptides, 126 from propeptide region and 30 from the central domain, according to the comparison with reported active sequences.

Conclusions: Collagen analysis from a bioinformatic approach allowed us to classify collagen from 5 different animal sources, to establish its interchangeability as potential additive in diverse fields and also to determine the content of bioactive peptides from its in silico hydrolysis.

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