Atlantic salmon (Salmo salar) waste as a unique source of biofunctional protein hydrolysates: Emerging productions, promising applications, and challenges mitigation

Monjurul Haq, Md Sadek Ali, Jin Seok Park, Jang Woo Kim, Wei Zhang, Byung Soo Chun

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

8 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The Atlantic salmon is an extremely popular fish for its nutritional value and unique taste among several fish species. Researchers are focusing on the utilization of Atlantic salmon waste for generating protein hydrolysates rich in peptides and amino acids and investigating their health benefits. Several technological approaches, including enzymatic, chemical, and the recently developed subcritical water hydrolysis, are currently used for the production of Atlantic salmon waste protein hydrolysates. Hydrolyzing various wastes, e.g., heads, bones, skin, viscera, and trimmings, possessing antioxidant, blood pressure regulatory, antidiabetic, and anti-inflammatory properties, resulting in applications in human foods and nutraceuticals, animal farming, pharmaceuticals, cell culture, and cosmetics industries. Furthermore, future applications, constraints several challenges associated with industrial hydrolysate production, including sensory, safety, and economic constraints, which could be overcome by suggested techno processing measures. Further studies are recommended for developing large-scale, commercially viable production methods, focusing on eradicating sensory constraints and facilitating large-scale application.

Original languageEnglish
Article number141017
Number of pages18
JournalFood Chemistry
Volume462
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Atlantic salmon
  • Biofunctional properties
  • Challenges
  • Fish waste hydrolysate
  • Industrial applications
  • Mitigations

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