Amount of Collagen in the Meat Contained in Japanese Daily Dishes and the Collagen Peptide Content in Human Blood after Ingestion of Cooked Fish Meat
2019
Asai, Tomoko | Takahashi, Akira | Ito, Kumie | Uetake, Tatsuo | Matsumura, Yasuki | Ikeda, Kaori | Inagaki, Nobuya | Nakata, Masahiro | Imanishi, Yoshiharu | Satō, Kenji
Objectives of the present study were to evaluate amounts of collagen in Japanese daily dishes and contents of food-derived collagen peptides in human blood. The meat in one serving of most Japanese daily dishes contains 0.2–2.5 g of collagen, except for beef tendon, eel with skin, and skinned shark tail (7.6–13.3 g). After ingestion of cooked shark meat, nine collagen di- and tripeptides were detected in plasma and the area under the curve of most peptides, except for Hyp-Gly and Pro-Hyp-Gly, was ∼30% of that after ingestion of collagen hydrolysate containing an equivalent amount of collagen. Likewise, only ∼30% of the total collagen in the meat was liberated into solution by pepsin and pancreatin digestion. Thus, ingestion of collagen-rich meat increases the collagen peptides in blood, which depends on not only the collagen content in the meat but also the susceptibility of the collagen/gelatin to digestive endoproteinases.
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