Litcius/Paper detail

Bioactive peptides produced by engineered probiotics and other food-grade bacteria: A review

Haydee Eliza Romero‐Luna, Adrián Hernández‐Mendoza, Aarón F. González-Córdova, Audry Peredo-Lovillo

2021Food Chemistry X52 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Synthetic biology is employed for the study and design of engineered microbes with new and improved therapeutic functions. The main advantage of synthetic biology is the selective genetic manipulation of living organisms with desirable beneficial effects such as probiotics. Engineering technologies have contributed to the edition of metabolic processes involved in the mechanisms of action of probiotics, such as the generation of bioactive peptides. Hence, current information related to bioactive peptides, produced by different engineering probiotics, with antimicrobial, antiviral, antidiabetic, and antihypertensive activities, as well as their potential use as functional ingredients, is discussed here. Besides, the effectiveness and safety aspects of these bioactive peptides were also described.

Topics & Concepts

Synthetic biologyBiotechnologyAntimicrobialBiologyAntimicrobial peptidesComputational biologyGenetically engineeredMetabolic engineeringBiochemical engineeringBiochemistryMicrobiologyEngineeringGeneProbiotics and Fermented FoodsTransgenic Plants and ApplicationsProtein Hydrolysis and Bioactive Peptides
Bioactive peptides produced by engineered probiotics and other food-grade bacteria: A review | Litcius