In vitro digestion models represent very promising approaches to mimic the physiological digestion processes as predictive of in vivo behaviors or directly alternatives to in vivo experiments. The static approaches are able to reproduce the physiological conditions (pH values and salts, digestive time, and enzyme concentration), monitoring food components digestibility, bioaccessibility, and bioavailability; the only limit is the lack of mechanical aspects of passive diffusion, and consequently the simulation of pH and buffer changes over time. Despite this, the great advantages of rapidity and low costs make static models widely diffused to monitor digestion of different food matrices and compounds. In this chapter, we focused our attention on the application of in vitro static approaches in the study of food protein digestion with an in-depth analysis of the international consensus static digestion protocol (COST action INFOGEST) and its evolution over the years. © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Food protein digestion by in vitro static approaches

Colombo Raffaella;Frosi Ilaria;Papetti Adele
2024-01-01

Abstract

In vitro digestion models represent very promising approaches to mimic the physiological digestion processes as predictive of in vivo behaviors or directly alternatives to in vivo experiments. The static approaches are able to reproduce the physiological conditions (pH values and salts, digestive time, and enzyme concentration), monitoring food components digestibility, bioaccessibility, and bioavailability; the only limit is the lack of mechanical aspects of passive diffusion, and consequently the simulation of pH and buffer changes over time. Despite this, the great advantages of rapidity and low costs make static models widely diffused to monitor digestion of different food matrices and compounds. In this chapter, we focused our attention on the application of in vitro static approaches in the study of food protein digestion with an in-depth analysis of the international consensus static digestion protocol (COST action INFOGEST) and its evolution over the years. © 2024 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
2024
Protein Digestion-Derived Peptides: Chemistry, Bioactivity, and Health Effects
Cristina Martinez-Villaluenga, Blanca Hernandez-Ledesma
The Food Science/Nutrition category includes resources in food science covering topics such as food additives and contaminants, food chemistry and biochemistry, food microbiology, technology, engineering, processing, quality, and safety. Also covered are meat science, dairy science, and brewing. The closely related area of nutrition is also covered in this category, including general nutrition, nutrition and metabolism, nutrition science, nutritional biochemistry, and dietetics.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
ELETTRONICO
1
30
30
9780443154676
Academic Press-Elsevier
New York
STATI UNITI D'AMERICA
bioactive peptides, digestive system, food analysis, Food chemistry, food products, food proteins and peptides, in vitro digestion, INFOGEST gastrointestinal digestion protocol, metabolism, protein isolates, static gastrointestinal approaches
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/B9780443191411000017
2 Contributo in Volume::2.1 Contributo in volume (Capitolo o Saggio)
3
268
none
Colombo, Raffaella; Frosi, Ilaria; Papetti, Adele
info:eu-repo/semantics/bookPart
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/1511429
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