“…Various food protein sources including fish, milk, egg, soybean, wheat and zein, among others, have been exploited to produce antioxidative protein hydrolysates and peptides (Table 1). Fish and other seafood sources have particularly gained much interest as potential antioxidative peptide sources mainly due to the abundance of raw materials in the form of processing discards and underutilized species, in conjunction with research findings indicating an array of other biological activities for fish protein hydrolysates and specific peptide sequences derived from these sources such as antihypertensive, immunomodulatory, neuroactive, antimicrobial, mineral and hormonal regulating properties (Bernet, Montel, Noel, & Dupouy, 2000;Duarte, Vinderola, Ritz, Perdigó n, & Matar, 2006;Je, Qian, Byun, & Kim, 2007;Jun, Park, Jung, & Kim, 2004;Jung et al, 2006;Liu et al, 2008;Murray & Fitzgerald, 2007). Table 1 also lists different enzymes and/or processes that have been used in making these protein hydrolysates and peptides.…”