Kenji Sato, Yukari Egashira, Shin Ono, Satoshi Mochizuki, Yuki Shimmura, Yoshio Suzuki, Megumi Nagata, Kaori Hashimoto, Tamami Kiyono, Eun Young Park, Yasushi Nakamura, Mariko Itabashi, Yuka Sakata, Seigo Furuta, Hiroo Sanada
JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY 61(26) 6304-6310 2013年7月 査読有り
A hepatoprotective peptide, pyroglutamyl leucine (pyroGlu-Leu), was identified in wheat gluten hydrolysate through an in vivo activity-guided fractionation approach based on D-galactosamine-induced acute hepatitis in rats and fractionation of peptides with large-scale preparative ampholine-free isoelectric focusing. The active acidic fraction predominantly consisted of pyroglutamyl peptides and free pyroglutamic acid. Pyroglutamyl peptides were derivatized with phenyl isothiocyanate after removal of a pyroglutamyl residue by pyroglutamate aminopeptidase. The derivatives were purified by reversed-phase HPLC and subjected to sequence analysis. The active fraction contained pyroGlu-Ile, pyroGlu-Leu, pyroGlu-Gln, pyroGlu-Gln-Gln, and free pyroGlu. Ingestion of pyroGlu-Leu at 20 mg/kg body weight significantly decreased serum aspartate and alanine aminotransferases to approximately 30% and 20% of those values of the vehicle group, respectively, which were near the normal levels. Thirty minutes after ingestion of pyroGlu-Leu at 20 mg/kg, the concentration of pyroGlu-Leu in portal blood plasma increased to approximately 2 mu M.