Sarcopenia is an age-related progressive
muscle disorder characterized
by accelerated loss of muscle mass, strength, and function, which
are important causes of physiological dysfunctions in the elderly.
At present, the main alleviating method includes protein supplements
to stimulate synthesis of muscle proteins. Food protein-derived peptides
containing abundant branched-chain amino acids have a remarkable effect
on the improvement of sarcopenia. Understanding the underlying molecular
mechanism and clarifying the structure–activity relationship
is essential for the mitigation of sarcopenia. This present review
recaps the epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis, and treatment of
sarcopenia, which facilitates a comprehensive understanding of sarcopenia.
Moreover, the latest research progress on food-derived antisarcopenic
peptides is reviewed, including their antisarcopenic activity, molecular
mechanism as well as structural characteristics. Food-derived bioactive
peptides can indeed alleviate/mitigate sarcopenia. These antisarcopenic
peptides play a pivotal role mainly by activating the PI3K/Akt/mTOR
and MAPK pathways and inhibiting the ubiquitin-proteasome system and
AMPK pathway, thus promoting the synthesis of muscle proteins and
inhibiting their degradation. Antisarcopenic peptides alleviate sarcopenia via specific peptides, which may be absorbed into the circulation
and exhibit their bioactivity in intact forms. The present review
provides a theoretical reference for mitigation and prevention of
sarcopenia by food protein-derived bioactive peptides.
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