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Abbas Zamani

Abbas Zamani

Academic rank: Associate Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId:
HIndex:
Faculty: Natural Resources and Enviroments
Address: Fisheries Department, Faculty of Natural Resources and Environment, Malayer University, 4 km Arak road, Malayer, Hamedan, Iran.
Phone: +988132355330

Research

Title
THE STUDY OF ANTIOXIDATIVE ACTIVITY OF PROTEIN HYDROLYSATE PREPARED FROM INDIAN MACKEREL Rastrelliger kanagurta
Type
Presentation
Keywords
Trypsin, Antioxidateive activity, Indian Mackerel
Year
2015
Researchers Abbas Zamani ، Soottawat Benjakul

Abstract

Indian mackerel (Rastrelliger kanagurta), a species of Scombridae family, has a high content of dark muscle resulting in difficulties in making high-quality surimi from it. However, Indian mackerel muscle could be used for the production of value-added products such as protein hydrolysate. Enzymatic hydrolysis could be applied to improve and upgrade the functional and nutritional properties of fish proteins. Trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) is a serine proteinase that specifically hydrolyzes peptide chains at the carboxyl side of arginine and lysine residues. It plays a key role in the food industry, e.g. in the production of protein hydrolysates, meat flavorants and culture media. This enzyme has been isolated from the viscera of various fish such as Unicorn leatherjacket (Aluterus monoceros) used for fillet production in Thailand, especially for export as frozen fillets. As a consequence, large amounts of viscera have been produced as by-products and are an important source for isolation of proteolytic enzymes, especially trypsin. In this study trypsin from unicorn leatherjacket pyloric caeca was used for production of protein hydrolysate with antioxidative activity from Indian mackerel muscle. Trypsin was purified by ammonium sulfate precipitation and soybean trypsin inhibitor (SBTI)–Sepharose 4B affinity chromatography from the pyloric caeca of unicorn leatherjacket and hydrolysate from Indian mackerel muscle with different degrees of hydrolysis (20, 30 and 40% DH) was prepared using the purified trypsin and antioxidative activities (DPPH: 1,1-diphenyl-2-picrylhydrazyl radical-scavenging activity; ABTS: 2,2′-azinobis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid) radical-scavenging activity; FRAP: ferric-reducing antioxidant power and ferrous-chelating activity) of the hydrolysate were determined. The results showed antioxidative activities of the hydrolysate from Indian mackerel muscle increased with increasing DH up to 40% (P <0.05) (Figure 1 ).