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Novel Bacillus Milk-Clotting Enzyme Produces Diverse Functional Peptides in Semihard Cheese.

Fanqiang MengHaizhen ZhaoFengxia LuXiaomei BieZhaoxin LuYingjian Lu
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2021)
Although rennet is one of the best choices for cheese manufacturing, its production cannot meet the growing demands of the cheese industry. Thus, new milk-clotting enzymes (MCEs) with similar or better properties as/than those of calf chymosin are needed urgently. Here, three MCEs, BY-2, BY-3, and BY-4, were mined by bioinformatic analysis and then expressed in and isolated from Escherichia coli. BY-4 had the highest milk-clotting activity/proteolytic activity (238.76) with enzyme properties similar to those of calf chymosin. BY-4 cheese had a composition, appearance, consistency/texture, and overall acceptability proximate to calf chymosin cheese. The EC50 values of peptides extracted from BY-4 cheese for 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl inhibition (antioxidant property), angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibition (antihypertensivity), and growth inhibition of liver cancer cells (antitumor property) were found to be 81, 49, and 238 μg/mL, respectively, which were 2.35, 2.59, and 2.12 folds higher than those of calf chymosin cheese. These results indicated the potential of BY-4 as a supplement to calf chymosin in cheese manufacturing, especially for functional and health care purposes.
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