2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2018.06.084
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Evaluation of fish protein hydrolysates in juvenile African catfish (Clarias gariepinus) diets

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Cited by 48 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…Glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid, and alanine were the predominant amino acids in turbot FPHs with remarkable content in the essential ones: TEAA/TAA values were higher than 28% (Table 3). Considering the concentrations of total and soluble proteins and the profile of amino acids along with the values of digestibility, valuable applications of turbot hydrolysates can be envisaged such as an ingredient in human food supplements and animal feed [10,35]. Further trials should be conducted to assess these potentialities.…”
Section: Production and Chemical Composition Of Turbot Fphsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Glycine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid, and alanine were the predominant amino acids in turbot FPHs with remarkable content in the essential ones: TEAA/TAA values were higher than 28% (Table 3). Considering the concentrations of total and soluble proteins and the profile of amino acids along with the values of digestibility, valuable applications of turbot hydrolysates can be envisaged such as an ingredient in human food supplements and animal feed [10,35]. Further trials should be conducted to assess these potentialities.…”
Section: Production and Chemical Composition Of Turbot Fphsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[7][8][9]. All these benefits make fish hydrolysates a valuable and easily digestible protein supplement, with high nutritional properties and interesting applications as an ingredient for human and animal functional foods [5,10,11]. From the 1940s, the number of fish species, types of fishery wastes, and proteolytic enzymes (both endo-and exogenous) studied for FPHs production has been extensive [11][12][13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The functional capacity of FPHs in terms of antihypertensive, antioxidant, antiproliferative, antimicrobial, etc., in vitro bioactivities, is one of the most valuable properties of these bioproduction [11][12][13][14]. Additionally, since hydrolysates are composed of soluble proteins, peptides, and free amino acids, they are an excellent ingredient of aquaculture feeds and pet-food diets in substitution of the conventional fishmeals, improving generally the effectiveness of feeds and diets to support fish and animal healthy growths [15][16][17][18].However, complete studies of production of enzymatic hydrolysates from salmonid wastes including optimization of proteolysis conditions, analysis of kinetic hydrolysis, chemical characterization of all products obtained, bioactivities, and peptides size distribution are practically non-existent. Therefore, the aims of this work are (1) optimization of the experimental conditions to produce FPHs, using Alcalase, of salmonid by-products (heads of salmon and rainbow trout) by response surface methodology (RSM), (2) mathematical analysis of hydrolysis kinetics by Weibull equation, (3) chemical characterization of products obtained from salmonid hydrolysis, (4) identification of average molecular weights and peptide size distribution of the hydrolysates, and (5) determination of two bioactives (antioxidant and antihypertensive) from FPHs.Mar.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The functional capacity of FPHs in terms of antihypertensive, antioxidant, antiproliferative, antimicrobial, etc., in vitro bioactivities, is one of the most valuable properties of these bioproduction [11][12][13][14]. Additionally, since hydrolysates are composed of soluble proteins, peptides, and free amino acids, they are an excellent ingredient of aquaculture feeds and pet-food diets in substitution of the conventional fishmeals, improving generally the effectiveness of feeds and diets to support fish and animal healthy growths [15][16][17][18].…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Many studies have shown considerable success in partial or total replacement of dietary FM with plant protein (PP) sources for various marine fish species during the on-growing phase (Hernández et al, 2007;Salze et al, 2010;Moxley et al, 2014;Yaghoubi et al, 2016;Lazzarotto et al, 2018;Kotzamanis et al, 2018 among others). However, there exist few studies addressing this issue at younger stages of development and how these feeding strategies affect their performance, digestive capacities and nutritional condition (El-Saidy and Gaber, 2003;Enyidi and Mgbenka, 2015;Gisbert et al, 2016;Swanepoel and Goosen, 2018).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%