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      Conventional and Novel Technologies in the Production of Dairy Bioactive Peptides

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          Abstract

          Background

          In recent years, researchers have focused on functional ingredients, functional foods, and nutraceuticals due to the rapidly increasing interest in bioactive components, especially in bioactive peptides. Dairy proteins are a rich and balanced source of amino acids and their derived bioactive peptides, which possess biological and physiological properties. In the dairy industry, microbial fermentation and enzymatic hydrolysis are promising methods for producing bioactive peptides because of their rapid efficiency, and mild reaction conditions. However, these methods utilize less raw material, take long reaction time, result in low yields, and low activity products when used alone, which pose industry to seek for novel methods as pretreatments to increase the yield of bioactive peptides.

          Scope and Approach

          This review emphasizes the production of peptides from the dairy proteins and discusses the potential use of novel technologies as pretreatments to conventional methods of bioactive peptides production from dairy proteins, including the mechanisms of novel technologies along with respective examples of use, advantages, limitations, and challenges to each technology.

          Key Findings and Conclusion

          Noteworthily, hydrolysis of dairy proteins liberate wide-range of peptides that possess remarkable biological functions to maintain human health. Novel technologies in the dairy industry such as ultrasound-assisted processing (UAP), microwave-assisted processing (MAP), and high pressure processing (HPP) are innovative and environmentally friendly. Generally, novel technologies are less effectual compared to conventional methods, therefore used in combination with fermentation and enzymatic hydrolysis, and are promising pretreatments to modify peptides’ profile, improve the yields, and high liberation of bioactive peptides as compared to conventional technologies. UAP is an innovative and most efficient technology as its mechanical effects and cavitation change the protein conformation, increase the biological activities of enzymes, and enhance enzymatic hydrolysis reaction rate.

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          Most cited references153

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          Applications of ultrasound in food technology: Processing, preservation and extraction.

          Ultrasound is well known to have a significant effect on the rate of various processes in the food industry. Using ultrasound, full reproducible food processes can now be completed in seconds or minutes with high reproducibility, reducing the processing cost, simplifying manipulation and work-up, giving higher purity of the final product, eliminating post-treatment of waste water and consuming only a fraction of the time and energy normally needed for conventional processes. Several processes such as freezing, cutting, drying, tempering, bleaching, sterilization, and extraction have been applied efficiently in the food industry. The advantages of using ultrasound for food processing, includes: more effective mixing and micro-mixing, faster energy and mass transfer, reduced thermal and concentration gradients, reduced temperature, selective extraction, reduced equipment size, faster response to process extraction control, faster start-up, increased production, and elimination of process steps. Food processes performed under the action of ultrasound are believed to be affected in part by cavitation phenomena and mass transfer enhancement. This review presents a complete picture of current knowledge on application of ultrasound in food technology including processing, preservation and extraction. It provides the necessary theoretical background and some details about ultrasound the technology, the technique, and safety precautions. We will also discuss some of the factors which make the combination of food processing and ultrasound one of the most promising research areas in the field of modern food engineering. Copyright © 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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            Green alternative methods for the extraction of antioxidant bioactive compounds from winery wastes and by-products: A review

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              Proteolytic systems of lactic acid bacteria.

              Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) have a very long history of use in the manufacturing processes of fermented foods and a great deal of effort was made to investigate and manipulate the role of LAB in these processes. Today, the diverse group of LAB includes species that are among the best-studied microorganisms and proteolysis is one of the particular physiological traits of LAB of which detailed knowledge was obtained. The proteolytic system involved in casein utilization provides cells with essential amino acids during growth in milk and is also of industrial importance due to its contribution to the development of the organoleptic properties of fermented milk products. For the most extensively studied LAB, Lactococcus lactis, a model for casein proteolysis, transport, peptidolysis, and regulation thereof is now established. In addition to nutrient processing, cellular proteolysis plays a critical role in polypeptide quality control and in many regulatory circuits by keeping basal levels of regulatory proteins low and removing them when they are no longer needed. As part of the industrial processes, LAB are challenged by various stress conditions that are likely to affect metabolic activities, including proteolysis. While environmental stress responses of LAB have received increasing interest in recent years, our current knowledge on stress-related proteolysis in LAB is almost exclusively based on studies on L. lactis. This review provides the current status in the research of proteolytic systems of LAB with industrial relevance.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Nutr
                Front Nutr
                Front. Nutr.
                Frontiers in Nutrition
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                2296-861X
                26 May 2022
                2022
                : 9
                : 780151
                Affiliations
                [1] 1Institute of Food Science and Nutrition, University of Sargodha , Sargodha, Pakistan
                [2] 2Institute of Chemistry, University of Sargodha , Sargodha, Pakistan
                [3] 3School of Food Science and Engineering, South China University of Technology , Guangzhou, China
                [4] 4Department of Food Science and Technology, Muhammad Nawaz Shareef (MNS) University of Agriculture , Multan, Pakistan
                [5] 5Food Microbiology and Biotechnology Laboratory, North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University , Greensboro, NC, United States
                [6] 6Campus Straubing for Biotechnology and Sustainability, Technical University of Munich , Straubing, Germany
                [7] 7German Institute of Food Technologies (DIL e.V.) , Quakenbrück, Germany
                Author notes

                Edited by: Blanca Hernandez-Ledesma, Spanish National Research Council (CSIC), Spain

                Reviewed by: Jorge Welti-Chanes, Instituto de Tecnología y Educación Superior de Monterrey (ITESM), Mexico; Dominic Agyei, University of Otago, New Zealand; Abdel-Moneim Eid Abdel-Moneim, Egyptian Atomic Energy Authority, Egypt; Waseem Khalid, Government College University, Faisalabad, Pakistan

                *Correspondence: Mian Anjum Murtaza, anjum.murtaza@ 123456uos.edu.pk
                Muhammad Modassar A. N. Ranjha, ModassarRanjha@ 123456gmail.com
                Salam A. Ibrahim, ibrah001@ 123456ncat.edu

                This article was submitted to Nutrition and Food Science Technology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Nutrition

                Article
                10.3389/fnut.2022.780151
                9178506
                35694165
                e00523d8-0a03-4ef2-997c-caed8caccea9
                Copyright © 2022 Murtaza, Irfan, Hafiz, Ranjha, Rahaman, Murtaza, Ibrahim and Siddiqui.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 20 September 2021
                : 05 April 2022
                Page count
                Figures: 3, Tables: 5, Equations: 0, References: 153, Pages: 19, Words: 12122
                Categories
                Nutrition
                Review

                dairy proteins,bioactive peptides production,green technologies,ultrasound-assisted extraction,fermentation,enzymatic hydrolysis

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