ScholarAI
ScholarAIby Jenni AI

Built for Researchers

Accelerate your research and writing process with Jenni

Try

Biological functions of peptides from legumes in gastrointestinal health. A review legume peptides with gastrointestinal protection.

Milagros Faridy Juárez-Chairez, M. S. Cid-Gallegos, O. G. Meza-Márquez, C. Jiménez‐MartínezJune 30, 202220 citations
DOI10.1111/jfbc.14308
Sourcehttps://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jfbc.14308
Jenni AI

Chat with this paper

Extract insights, manage references, and accelerate your research

Continue your research
– It's free

Abstract

Extensively consumed worldwide, legumes such as beans, soybeans, chickpeas, and peas represent a great source of protein. Legume-derived proteins provide bioactive peptides, small sequences of amino acids produced by enzymatic hydrolysis, gastrointestinal digestion, fermentation, or germination. Recent studies showed diverse biological effects of these peptides as antioxidants, antihypertensives, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antithrombotic, antidiabetic, hypocholesterolemic, and even immunomodulators. These beneficial effects aid in preventing and treating chronic illnesses, particularly inflammatory disorders, obesity, and cardiovascular diseases. Thus, this work discusses these biological functions in gastrointestinal digestion health of bioactive peptides obtained from common beans, soybeans, chickpeas, peas, and other legumes. PRACTICAL APPLICATIONS: Knowledge of the nutraceutical properties of legumes can encourage the use of these seeds as ingredients in the development and design of functional foods.