Bioactive Casein Phosphopeptides in Dairy Products as Nutraceuticals for Functional Foods

© 2012 Pinto et al., licensee InTech. This is an open access chapter distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Bioactive Casein Phosphopeptides in Dairy Products as Nutraceuticals for Functional Foods


Introduction
Nutraceuticals, a term combining the words "nutrition" and "pharmaceutical", is a food or food product that provides medical or health benefits including the prevention and treatment of diseases. A functional food essentially provides a health benefit beyond the basic nutrition, whereas nutraceutical is used to describe an isolated or concentrated molecular extract of bioactive compounds. Milk is a unique food providing a variety of essential nutrients necessary to properly fuel the body. Inactive food proteins can release encrypted bioactive peptides in vivo or in vitro by digestive enzymatic hydrolysis. Bioseparation protocols offer unique possibilities for a number of application areas, e.g., hydrolyzate-based nutraceutical ingredients for functional foods, dietary supplements and medical foods.
Many ingredients are included in the wide range of nutraceuticals, such as essential amino acids, conjugated fatty acids, vitamins, minerals and polyphenols. They have already been patented and incorporated in functional foods and nutritional beverages. Such components are believed to improve overall health and well-being, reducing the risk of specific diseases or minimizing the effects of other health concerns. However, milk is devoid of flavonoids, the most common group of vegetable polyphenolic compounds, which act as antioxidants and free radical scavengers. In contrast, the ingestion of soy and green tea extract may reduce the risk of developing prostate cancer and may protect against various other types of cancer [1][2]. An interesting patented invention has made available an extended-release form of polyphenols and riboflavin (vitamin B2) coated with methylcellulose [3]. Coating slows down the release of polyphenols in the nutraceutical preparation [3]. Possible applications of coating technology could be extended to all of the bioactive peptides susceptible to digestive enzymes. For example, glutathione can be maintained in human blood at normal levels by supplying it as dry-filled capsules [4]. Nutrients and bioactive compounds may be Nutraceutical products comprising short bioactive peptides showing in vitro or in vivo antimicrobial, ACE-inhibitory activity and/or antihypertensive and/or antioxidant activity are being considered for possible use by the pharmaceutical industry. The CN hydrolyzates could serve as food preservatives to reinforce the body's natural defenses or as pharmaceutical products for facilitating the control of blood and/or bacterial infections [12]. Much research has been devoted to increasing mineral transport by phosphorylated groups of peptides [13]. CPP in commercial hydrolysed casein (Tatua Cooperative Dairy Co. Ltd, New Zealand and Arla Foods Ingredients and Sweden) seem to help the absorption of chelated calcium, iron, copper, zinc and manganese in the intestine (Table 1). Thus, CPPbound amorphous calcium phosphate (ACP) displayed anticariogenic effect when added to dentifrices or oral care products by localizing calcium and phosphate ions at the tooth surface. Similarly, it has been claimed that a chewing gum or other confectionery product containing a combination of CPP-ACP and sodium bicarbonate as active ingredients can provide dental health benefits [14]. In experiments on humans, synthetic CPP-ACP nanocomplexes incorporated in mouth rinses and sugar-free chewing gums have been proven to be potential anticariogenic agents [15] (Table 1).
Bioactive Casein Phosphopeptides in Dairy Products as Nutraceuticals for Functional Foods 5 Figure 1. Main bioactivity of peptides formed by the enzymatic digestion of milk proteins (source: [11]). ACP= amorphous calcium phosphate; CPP= Casein phosphopeptides Table 1. Commercial dairy products and ingredients with health or function claims based on CPP content (source: modified from [16]).

Bioactive peptides released in vitro by the hydrolysis of milk proteins
Peptides with various bioactivities can be produced according to two different methods: i) in vitro fermentation of milk inoculated with starter cultures and ii) in vitro digestion of milk proteins by one or more proteolytic enzymes. by endopeptidases, general aminopeptidases and PepX are next subjected to additional cleavage by the tripeptidase, PepT, and dipeptidases, PepV and PepD ( Figure 2). Other peptidases with more specific substrate specificities include PepA, which liberates Nterminal acidic residues from 3-to 9-residue long peptides; PepP, which prefers tripeptides carrying proline in the middle position; PepR and PepI, which act on dipeptides containing proline in the penultimate position; PepQ, which cleaves dipeptides carrying proline in the second position; and PepS, which shows preference for peptides containing two to five residues with Arg or aromatic amino acid residues in the N-terminal position [20][21]23] ( Figure 2). This proteolytic system is able to support LAB growth to high cell densities (10 9 -10 10 cfu/mL) in milk containing only small amounts of hydrolytic products that are transportable into the cells for assimilation. Lb. helveticus and Lb. delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus possess cell wall proteinase activity stronger than that of lactococci. The number of intracellular proteins released by St. thermophilus is greater than that by Lb. helveticus [24]. Proteins released in cheese from a starter-based thermophilic LAB, such as Lb. helveticus, Lb. delbruecki subsp. lactis and Streptococcus salivarius subsp. thermophilus and Propionibacterium freudenreichii, have been identified using 2D-PAGE and mass spectrometry (MS) analysis [24]. Similarly, bioactive peptides have been determined using High Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC) and offline Matrix-Assisted Laser Desorption/Ionization Mass Spectrometry-Time-Of-Flight (MALDI-MS-TOF) [25]. These peptides were all generated from CN and released upon proteolysis depending on the bacterial strain [26]. In this manner, proteinases play a primary role, as they are able to generate specific bioactive peptides. Recombinant human αs1-casein digested by trypsin gave rise to several ACEinhibitory peptides and calcium-binding CPP. These peptides did not form in cheese whey, although they can be formed from CN during fermentation using various commercial dairy starters [27]. The combination of the LAB bacteria and proteolytic enzymes could serve to increase the range of bioactive peptides.
(ii) In vitro hydrolysis of CN by pepsin and trypsin could produce many bioactive peptides. Pepsin, an endopeptidase with broad specificity, preferentially cleaves hydrophobic, preferably aromatic, residues. Trypsin specifically hydrolyses peptide bonds just after a lysine or an arginine residue of β-casein A 1 and A 2 variant (11 and 4, respectively); κcasein A and B (9 and 5); αs2-CN A (24 and 6); or αs1-CN B (14 and 6). In this manner, tryptic hydrolysates of CN contain uneven peptides of up to 8159 Da and also free amino acids [28]. We have demonstrated that CN hydrolysate by pepsin (P) and trypsin (T) in succession does not contain peptides with molecular mass greater than 2431 Da. β-CN resulted extensively hydrolyzed into a high number of oligopeptides by using proteases with well defined cleavage specificity. Controlled partial hydrolysis by proteinases could lead to the formation of partially degraded proteins critical for obtaining new functional products. The choice of digestion enzymes needs to be evaluated carefully because influences the hydrolysate final composition. A high number of peptides with antimicrobial, anti-hypertensive and opiod-like activity has been identified ( Table 2), some of which exactly matched those described in the literature for potential bioactivity ( Table 2). The potent opioid β-CM7 peptide retained part of its original opioid activity-Milk Protein 8 like food hormone when progressively shortened. The synthetic β-casomorphin derivatives have been shown to be highly specific and potent β-type opioid receptor ligands [29].
We also performed sequential milk protein (powder sample) digestions using various endoproteases facilitating a consistent partial hydrolysis. The high degree of specificity in terms of cleaving peptide bonds exhibited by a cocktail of enzymes (P, T and P432 from Biocatalysts, U.K) yielded a limited number of CPP. After fractionation on an HA column, PT= Pepsin and Trypsin action; P= Phosphate group.  both non-CPP and CPP were identified as shown in Table 3. Different oxidation rates of Met residues in the same protein resulted in formation of the peptides with different molecular mass. In most cases, a single Met-containing peptide and its oxidized counterpart were identified. However, in many cases, when proteins contained several consecutive endoprotease sensitive bonds, different long peptides containing the same Met-oxidation site(s) were identified. The data in Table 3 suggest that the cocktail enzymes containing amino-and CPases, in addition to P and T, progressively reduce the size of peptides without altering the degree of phosphorylation. Evaluation of protein/peptide quality can take advantage of the tandem MS for the detection of native, partly oxidized and partly dephosphorylated peptides.
By this means, phosphorylated peptides (2 and 3P/mole) of a precursor of lactophorin (LP) (28 kDa milk glycoprotein), proteose-peptone component 3, and glycosylation-dependent adhesion molecule 1 were detected. In addition, three low molecular weight non-CPP derived from LP were detected.
Native milk proteins used as the substrate for digestion by enzymes did not form CPP. This suggests that denatured LP and other whey proteins could have the tendency to form low molecular-mass peptide aggregates characterized by a poor solubility. For this reason, the use of milk protein and/or any milk substrate powder must be discouraged to eliminate phosphates and salts from the substrate. The enzymatic hydrolysis of the casein implies the use of endoproteases. However, the protein hydrolysate with alcalase is used in infant formulae, dietetic foods, nutraceuticals, ice creams, dressings, fermented products, yogurts, and personal care products. CPP released by alcalase are truncated with respect to those released by trypsin. The identified peptides can be categorized into two groups, one containing multiphosphorylated peptides and the other tri-, di-and mono CPP. Each group contained a number of variously long peptides due to the broad specificity of alcalase cleaving peptide bonds mainly on the carboxyl side of Glu, Met, Leu, Tyr, Lys, and Gln. The exoproteases responsible for the hydrolysis are inactivated by heating for ~10 min to ~85 °C. The in vitro sequential use of pepsin, pancreatic proteases and extracts of human intestinal brush border membranes, mimicking the respective gastric, duodenal and jejuneal in vivo digestion of CN, exhibited significant bioactive effects. A limited number of CN and whey protein peptides survived the in vitro simulated gastro-intestinal digestion. The anionic character seems to confer a marked resistance to multi-phosphorylated CPP hydrolysis by endoprotease. Ten out of 19 CPP contained SerP available for binding minerals, and four of these peptides, αs1-CN (f57-90)5P, αs1-CN (f56-90)5P, αs1-CN (f55-76)5P, β-CN (f1-52)5P, were reported for the first time in the CN digests [42]. Only β-CN (f1-25)4P, 3P and 2P survived the simulated gastrointestinal digest of CN [43].
The ingress of foreign material in general, such as CPP, across the mucosal brush-border into the enterocyte is conditioned by the efficient dephosphorylation of peptides by alkaline phosphatase. This aspect deserves more in-depth investigation.
Phosphoserine residues are coloured red.
The in vivo digestion of milk proteins takes place mainly in the stomach under the action of pepsins, gastric digestive proteinases that are able to digest ~20% proteins. Afterwards, the pepsin digests pass to the duodenum where peptides are further hydrolyzed by pancreatic enzymes. The digestion is completed by membrane proteases and a variety of peptidases embedded in the brush border of the small intestine and released by the intestinal microflora. These peptidases release an amino acid residue or a dipeptide from the N-and C-terminal side of oligopeptides [45][46][47]. Phosphatase(s) located in the brush border of the apical membrane of enterocytes, act(s) in removing phosphate groups, thus promoting partial or full peptide dephosphorylation of peptides in different body districts. The phosphorylated sequence is responsible, at the intestinal pH, for binding Ca ++ , Zn ++ , and Mg ++ and for the in vivo resistance of the complex to gastrointestinal proteases [48]. Fe complexed to β-CN (f15-25)4P was scarcely hydrolyzed throughout the digestion, suggesting that the coordination of iron ions to CPP inhibits the action of both phosphatase and peptidases [49]. Brush border enzyme alkaline phosphatase activity could improve the absorption of Fe complexed CPP by releasing Fe from peptides. Moreover, Fe complexed to β-CN CPP was absorbed more than Fe complexed to αs1-CN CPP [50]. The differences in protein composition between cow and breast milk could explain some of the differences in the Fe bioavailability of the latter [50]. Iron deficiency, a major worldwide nutritional problem, can be reduced by CPP. Fe complexed CPP prevents the formation of poorly absorbed high molecular weight ferric hydroxides. Zinc absorption can also be enhanced by the formation of Zn complexed to CCP, in particular to β-CN (f1-25)4P [51]. Some portion of the mineral complexed CPP formed in the small intestine was resistant to the digestive and enteric bacteria enzymes and found in the feces of rats fed a casein-based diet [52]. Although literature data regarding intestinal CPP absorption are conflicting, the peptides seem to interact directly with the plasma membrane. One possible mode of CPP action on the transmembrane flux of calcium is that CPP might insert themselves into the plasma membrane and form their own calcium selective channels or act as calcium-carrier peptides rapidly internalized via endocytosis or other processes and eventually provide ionized calcium in the cytosol [53]. Cellular uptake studies of fluorine-18 labeled CPP in human colorectal adenocarcinoma cell line (HT-29) and human head and neck squamous cell carcinoma line (FaDu) cells at 37 °C and 48 °C showed a poor cell penetration because of the poor transport of the phosphopeptides through the cell membrane [54]. The results from in vivo studies are still too controversial, as there are many factors affecting Ca availability, such as the various co-present dietary compounds in the intestinal lumen [55]. Despite the vigor of the saturable active transport process by the duodenum, most of the absorption of ingested calcium occurs in the ileum (88% of calcium), jejunum (4%) and duodenum (8%) [56]. An important factor determining the contribution of the ileum to overall calcium absorption is the relatively long transit time of calcium in the segments of the small intestine, accounting for approximately 102 min in the ileum and 6 min in the duodenum [57]. The higher absorption of calcium occurred when inorganic P was added to the Ca-CPP preparation. CPP exhibit a potent ability to form soluble complexes with Ca 2+ and other trace elements, preventing the formation of Ca-phosphate precipitate in the intestine. CPP could limit the inhibitory effect of phosphate on Ca availability and increase Ca transport across the distal small intestine [55]. All components of the diet reaching the ileum make calcium soluble or keep it in solution within the ileum. Several molecules, particularly CPP, stimulate the passive diffusion of minerals. CPP have been for the first time detected in human ileostomy fluid, confirming their ability to survive gastrointestinal passage into the human distal ileum [58]. CPP released during milk digestion appeared to be stable for up to 8 h in ileostomy contents [58]. The in vivo formation of bovine CPP was demonstrated in the small intestinal fluid of minipigs after ingestion of a diet containing casein [59] and in the stomach and duodenum after ingestion of milk or yogurt [60].
The in vivo survival of CPP to the prolonged intestinal passage in the distal small intestine is a prerequisite for their function as bioactive substances [58]. CPP are protected from degradation in the gut by the milk matrix, provided that they are ingested as milk constituents and not as isolated CPP. Whole casein or individual casein fractions are used as raw materials to obtain CPP as dietary supplements. Ca could be bound to either SerP or Glu residues [61], suggesting that CPP may enhance the solubility of calcium in the intestinal lumen, thereby increasing the mineral availability for absorption in the small intestine [62,13]. Chemically synthesized CPP, i.e., β-CN (f1-25)4P and αs1-CN (f59-79)5P, carrying the characteristic cluster Ser(P)-Ser(P)-Ser(P)-Glu-Glu, increase the intracellular calcium uptake by the human cultured HT-29 tumor cells [63], Caco-2 cells [64] and osteoblasts [65]. A more pronounced effect has been observed for β-CN-derived peptides than for αs1-CN-counterparts. It has been suggested that CPP promote calcium binding, which would depend on the structural conformation conferred by the two phosphorylated 'acidic motif' and the N-terminal sequence of β-CN [63].
Dental caries are initiated via the demineralization of tooth hard tissue by organic acids directly from the diet or produced from fermentable carbohydrate by dental plaque cariogenic bacteria. CPP can help to replace the minerals that were previously lost consequently to caries [66][67]. Hence, there is a great interest in developing CPP as nutraceutical ingredients for the formulation of functional foods.

CPP enrichment by different techniques
CPP preferably comprise components released by four different casein families, each having a molecular weight greater than 500 Da. Multiply and singly, tryptic CPP can be simultaneously detected using MALDI-TOF, and the location of phosphate groups by a combination of tandem mass spectrometry and computer-assisted database search programs, such as SEQUEST (Trademark, University of Washington, Seattle Wash) [68][69].
Nano-electrospray MS/MS has been used for phosphopeptide sequencing and exact determination of phosphorylation sites [70]. However, mass spectrometric analysis of proteolytic digests of proteins rarely provides full coverage of the phosphorylated sequence, with parts of the sequence often going undetected. In addition, protein phosphorylation is often sub-stoichiometric, such that ionization of CPP present in lower abundance in complex hydrolysates is ordinarily suppressed by strongly ionizable non-phosphorylated peptides. The MALDI-MS desorption/ionization efficiency for phosphopeptides was reported to be an order of magnitude lower than that recorded for the non-phosphorylated counterpart, and ionization became more difficult as the number of phosphate groups increased [71]. Direct analysis of phosphopeptides utilizes two orthogonal MS scanning techniques, both based on the production of phosphopeptide-specific marker ions at m/z 63 and/or 79 in the negative ion mode. These scanning methods combined with the liquid chromatography (LC)electrospray mass spectrometry (ESI) and nano-electrospray MS/MS allow the selective detection and identification of phosphopeptides even in complex proteolytic digests. Thus, even when the signal of the phosphopeptide is indistinguishable from the background, as in the conventional MS scan, low-abundant and low-stoichiometric phosphorylated peptides can be selectively determined in the presence of a large excess of non-phosphorylated peptides. This strategy is particularly well suited to phosphoproteins that are phosphorylated to varying degrees of stoichiometry at multiple sites [72]. However, the identification and characterization of phosphoproteins would be greatly improved using selective enrichment of CPP prior to MS analysis. An ancient technique for phosphoprotein enrichment consisted of the precipitation of phosphopeptides as insoluble barium salts and recovery by centrifugation, as according to the Manson & Annan method [73]. Highthroughput phosphoproteome technologies currently rely on combining pre-separation of proteins, most commonly by high-resolution two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel, in-gel tryptic cleavage of proteins, and subsequent MALDI-TOF or ESI-MS/MS mass spectrometry analysis of peptides [74]. The high resolving power of 2-DE with the sensitive MS requires extensive manual manipulation of samples. Alternative methods are based on chemical derivatization. For example, for β-elimination, a strong base such as NaOH or Ba(OH)2 is used to cleave the phosphoester bonds of phosphoserine and phosphothreonine and form dehydroalanine or dehydroaminobutyric acid, respectively, each able to react with different nucleophiles, such as ethanedithiol (EDT) or dithiothreitol (DTT). This procedure provides a considerably simpler method to enrich CPP. By using cross-linking reagents with affinity tags, such as biotin, interfering non-cross-linked peptides are eliminated, and CPP are highly enriched [75]. Although the chemical derivatization methods are highly selective, they are not widely applied in phosphoproteome studies due to sample loss by the multiple reaction steps and unavoidable side reactions [76]. Immobilized metal-ion affinity chromatography (IMAC, with Fe 3+ , Ga 3+ , Ni 2+ and Zr 4+ metal ions) and metal oxide affinity chromatography (MOAC, with TiO2, ZrO2, Al2O3 and Nb2O5) have been widely used for the quantitative binding of CPP on resin or adsorbent. Iminodiacetic acid (IDA, a tridentate metal-chelator) or nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA, a quadradentate metal chelator) are often used as IMAC functional matrices reacting with multivalent metal ions to form chelated ions with positive charges useful for the purification of phosphopeptides. Usually Fe 3+ , Ga 3+ and Al 3+ are bound to a chelating support prior to fractionating the complex mixture of peptides before MS analysis [77][78]. Ga 3+ showed selectivity for CPP higher than Fe 3+ and Al 3+ [77,79]. Phosphopeptides bound to IMAC resin are successively recovered in the column effluent by increasing either pH or the phosphate concentration in the buffer [80]. The negatively charged CPP selectively interact with TiO2 microspheres via bidentate binding at the dioxide surface [81][82][83]. TiO2-MOAC showed higher specificity than immobilized gallium (Ga 3+ ), immobilized iron (Fe 3+ ), or zirconium dioxide (ZrO2) affinity chromatography for phosphopeptide enrichment. The main problem associated with the chelating resins is the metal-ion leaching, which leads to CPP loss during the enrichment procedure. The selectivity of these methods was somewhat compromised by the detection of several acidic non-CPP that were also retained by the TiO2 column [84]. To overcome this drawback, the carboxyl groups are methyl esterified which eliminates the non-specific adsorption of acidic peptides on IMAC [85]. Considerable efforts have been expended to remove acidic non-CPP by washing the resin with 2,5-dihydroxybenzoic acid (DHB) [86] or phthalic acid [87]. It has been found that aliphatic hydroxyl acid modified metal oxide works more efficiently and more specifically than aromatic modifiers such as DHB and phthalic acid in titania and zirconia MOC [88]. However, all affinity techniques developed for the current enrichment strategies of CPP gave reproducible but incomplete results due to poor binding of low concentrations of CPP and the insufficient recovery of multiple phosphorylated peptides [89].
Recently, a specific hydroxyapatite (HA)-based enrichment procedure has been developed for complex mixtures of phosphoprotein/CPP [90]. Salt such as calcium phosphate, also occurring in bone and tooth tissue in the HA form, with the formula [Ca10(PO4)6(OH)2], has been previously used to enrich bone proteins [91]. The phosphate groups of phosphoproteins interact with crystalline lattice Ca 2+ [92] more strongly than do the carboxyl groups [93]. Moreover, increasing protein phosphorylation leads to tighter binding of the proteins/CPP to HA [92]. One might conclude that the affinity of the multi-phosphorylated proteins/peptides for HA is significantly higher than that of the same components with lower phosphorylation. Essentially, the HA-based protocol immobilizes on HA microgranules proteins/peptides through their phosphate groups, while the non phosphorylated components are washed out using various buffers. In a previous article, CPP immobilized on HA were progressively eluted, increasing phosphate in the elution buffer, and then identified by off-line MALDI-MS [94]. This procedure was accelerated, and loss during elution was minimized by spotting HA-CN/CPP microgranules onto a MALDI target and analyzing the peptides directly by MALDI-TOF [90]. This method was useful for measuring the phosphorylation level of phosphoproteins/CPP quickly, with less than 2 h elapsing from the fractionation of the protein/CPP to the readout of the MALDI spectra (excluding the trypsinolysis step).
The more important advantages of the procedure are the possibility of (1) detecting phosphorylated proteins/peptides even in complex mixtures, (2) determining phosphorylated sites and those dephosphorylated by phosphatase, (3) attaining information regarding weakly and heavily phosphorylated peptides and (4) adding the HA-CPP complex directly to food, which is enabled by the use of an edible resin such HA [90]. Moreover, use of available commercial CPP preparations by the food industry is difficult for three primary reasons: i) the matrix bound to CPP is often not edible and such products can be hazardous; ii) the preparation of CPP is a long and a laborious procedure that requires cumbersome and expensive manipulation; and iii) CPP have an unpleasant taste even in modest amounts, which disadvantageously limits their direct utilization as a human food ingredient. A novel HA-based method for food grade CPP preparation has been performed on tryptic digests of casein. HA captured all CPP free of non-CPP [90]. There were approximately 32 HA bound CPP, and all non-CPP peptides were eluted [90]. HA-based enrichment procedure has been successfully applied to phosphopeptide recovery from complex biological fluids such as human serum thus providing a great source of potential biomarkers of disease. Four primary phosphopeptides derived from fibrinogen were enriched from human serum (Figure 3a-b, Table 4). A similar set of phosphorylated peptides was previously obtained using a modified IMAC strategy coupled to iterative mass spectrometry-based scanning techniques [95], using the titanium ion-immobilized mesoporous silica particles and MALDI-TOF [96] and cerium ion-chelated magnetic silica microspheres [97].  (Table 4), is the segment anchored on the thrombin surface [98]. The other three phosphopeptides, (f1-15)1P, (f2-15)1P and (f2-16)1P (Table 4), are hydrolytic products of FPA. The serum level of fibrinogen and its hydrolytic products may reflect the expression and activation of enzymes including kinase, phosphatase, and protease [99].  16 , varied only slightly between the two groups [96]. The proportions of fibrinogen and their phosphorylation products offer new opportunities for basic research in exploring new frontiers in bio-marker discovery.
Phosphoserine residues are coloured red.

CPP in commercial milk as specific indicators of heated milks
Because of the lower value, the addition of UHT and milk powder to raw or pasteurized milk is prohibited (EU Directives 92/46 CEE and 94/71 CEE) for cheese milk. The intensity of heat treatment was found to correlate with the furosine content. Glycated proteins and peptides formed during the initial stages of the Maillard reaction are indirectly evaluated through the furosine content [100][101]. The Amadori compound formed upon the reaction of lysine residue with a lactose molecule will prevent the digestive enzymes from reaching the binding sites. Native and lactosylated forms of β-CN (f1-28)4P, (f1-27)4P and αs2-CN (f1-24)4P, although typical of UHT milk and milk powder, are missing in raw, pasteurized milk (71.7 °C for 15 s) and intensely pasteurized milk. The lactosylated peptides that varied with heat treatment characterize UHT milk added in amounts not lower than 10% to raw and pasteurized milk [102]. Milk delactosed with microbial β-galactosidase did not suppress the Maillard reaction; indeed, the furosine concentration increased to 35-400 mg/100 g of protein [103]. As expected, a lactose-reduced UHT milk had β-CN (f1-28)4P glycated mainly by its monosaccharides (Figure 4a).
Therefore, the nonenzymatically glycated CPP derived from the reaction of one molecule of glucose or galactose with a lysine residue (m/z 3641) can be considered to be the signature peptide of lactose-reduced milk (Figure 4).

CPP in yogurt
Yogurt is a fermented milk defined as the "food produced by culturing one or more of the optional dairy ingredients (cream, milk, partially skimmed milk, and skim milk) with a characteristic bacteria culture that contains the lactic acid-producing bacteria, Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus". A heat treatment of 90 °C for 10 min is considered optimal to obtain a good quality yogurt [104], and the addition of milk powder increases the content of furosine to more than 300 mg/100 g protein [105]. In yogurt, enzymes could give rise to the liberation of a particularly high number of bioactive peptides, among them CPP, which could be partly due to LAB proteolytic activity. Comparison of CPP in raw, pasteurized and intensely heated milks has previously shown that there is a plethora of milk peptides among which a few were glycosylated CPP [102]. Yogurt is prepared from intensely heated milk instead of low-pasteurized drinking milk. The CPP of two preparations were enriched on HA and analyzed by MALDI-TOF ( Table 5). The proportion of CPP with molecular masses between 2.5 and 4 kDa was significantly higher in yogurt than in pasteurized milk as shown in Table 5. Only four fragments of CPP-derived peptides produced during yogurt preparation occur in pasteurized milk (Table 5).
n.d. not detected; * CPP detected in vitro because it was liberated by plasmin in raw milk and enriched on HA. For example, β-CN (f1-28)4P, a peptide representing 100% intensity (assumed as base peak) of the signals in MALDI spectra, was reduced by approximately 30%; this loss was associated with the transformation of pasteurized milk into yogurt. One can deduce that the original peptide undergoes degradation even considering the higher number of formed CN peptides. In yogurt, β-CN (f1-28)4P, the most common CPP in pasteurized milk, was hydrolyzed into the peptide β-CN (f15-28)4P, which thus becomes the most abundant CPP.
, resulting from the CN hydrolysis by plasmin and enriched on HA, were also found as C-terminally shortened peptides. During fermentation and storage, αs2-CN (f115-150)3P and αs2-CN (f115-149)3P derived by plasmin action did not react further to produce shorter peptides, most likely because of the absence of proteolytic enzymes. In the yogurt fraction recovered by centrifugation, only five multi-phosphorylated αs1-CN and two lowphosphorylated κ-CN, κ-CN (f106-163)1P and κ-CN (f106-169)1P, were identified. Few CPP were less phosphorylated than the native peptides due to the presence of milk phosphatase, which was denatured in all pasteurized cheese-milks. The presence of lactosylated β-CN (f1-28)4P CPP was indicative of yogurt made with high-heat treated or milk fortified with milk protein powder [102]. Proteolysis of milk proteins in model yogurt systems has shown a similar set of primary CPP (Table 5). Therefore, the question is raised how CPP, derived from the enzymatic hydrolysis of yogurt CN are digested and absorbed in adult humans. For this reason, it is important to know the gastrointestinal resistance of CPP if used as a functional ingredient for fruit beverages. In the various stages of human digestion, a large quantity of CPP is produced in the stomach by partial hydrolysis of CN through pepsin action and in the small intestine by trypsin; these peptides are successively refined by endoproteases/exopeptidases. Although analysis of the intestinal contents of milk and yogurt ingestion has revealed the presence of CPP [60], their further resistance to gastrointestinal enzymes is poorly documented. Fragment β-CN (f1-24)4P has been previously identified in the lumen contents of rats after 60 min of digestion as a β-CN (f1-25)4P derived peptide [106]. Moreover, after yogurt ingestion, β-CN (f1-32)4P CPP was released in the human stomach [60] and β-CN (f1-31)4P was found in a yogurt sample. The fragment β-CN (f1-28)4P constitutes a clear example of the multi-functionality of milkderived peptides because some regions in the primary structure of caseins contain overlapping peptide sequences that exert different biological effects, in this case both mineral binding and immunostimulatory action [107]. Even with the difference in the peptide pattern, it is evident that CPP binding iron (or other metal ions) remains soluble in the digestive tract, where they escape further enzyme digestion [106]. The authors have studied in depth the simulated digestion of CPP from peptide precursors. These studies greatly benefit from the knowledge of enzyme specificities and degradation mechanisms. CPase and chymotryptic activity of pancreatin exhibits broad specificity, cleaving bonds on the carboxyl side of several amino acid residues of CPP. The latter, which are in the mass range 960-7087 Da (Table 5), are good candidates for intestinal absorption and for playing a possible physiological role in mineral bioavailability. However, there are conflicting results on the lack of αs1-CN (f43-52)2P and αs2-CN (f1-19)4P identified by other authors after CN hydrolysis with pancreatin, an enzyme used during the intestinal step of simulated physiological digestion [108]. Generally, the physiological effects of CPP may not always be extended to precursor peptides, although they are structurally similar. There are not enough data concerning the effects of CPP addition to probiotic acid fermented milks. However, probiotic bacteria such as Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacterium spp., selected because of their beneficial action, which they may manifest on the health of the consumer, grow slowly in milk because of the lack of the proteolytic activity [109]. For this reason, and also to reduce the fermentation time, probiotic yogurt is manufactured by yogurt bacteria (Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus) with the addition of probiotic culture. In parallel, non-digestible food ingredients, i.e., "prebiotics", resist digestion in the small intestine and reach the colon, where they act as a growth factor for Bifidobacterium species and are metabolized into short chain fatty acids by a limited number of the microorganisms also comprising the colonic microflora. Prebiotics are principally oligosaccharides (fructo-oligosaccharides, inulins, isomalto-oligosaccharides, lactilol, lactosucrose, lactulose, pyrodextrins, soy oligosaccharides, transgalacto-oligosaccharides, and xylo-oligosaccharides) that stimulate bifidobacteria growth. In probiotic yogurt containing inulin as a prebiotic, the number of bioactive peptides increased, which means that elevation in the proteolytic activity has a synergistic effect with probiotic counts of yogurt cultures. Therefore, the most proteolytic strains of St. thermophilus and Lb. delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus, spp. enhance the growth of Lb. acidophilus and Bifidobacterium. In our studies, the overall opiate activity of the bio-yogurt preparation containing Lb. acidophilus and Bifidobacterium spp. and inulin as a prebiotic was approximately twice that typical of traditional yogurt. In addition, the above yogurt preparation contained a variety of opioid agonistic and antagonistic, immunomodulation, anti-thrombotic, ACE-inhibitor, and antimicrobial activities. Traditional and probiotic yogurt both possess a characteristic soluble fraction composed by peptides exhibiting biological activity, amongst others. This fraction was found to include CPP, β-casomorphins and antithrombotic peptide precursors that did not differ greatly from one another. In a study comparing the proteolytic, amino-, di-, triand endopeptidase activity of nine strains of

CPP in a few cheese varieties
Whole milk contains a variety of endogenous plasmin-mediated CN peptides. In addition, CPP were released following cell lysis and release of intracellular LAB enzymes. This phenomenon was observed especially at the end of ripening in long-ripened cheeses, such as Comté [110], Grana Padano [111], Parmigiano-Reggiano and semi-hard Herrgard cheese [112]. In Grana Padano cheese, 45 CPP were identified, of which 24 originated from β-casein, 16 from αs1-casein and 5 from αs2-casein. These CPP formally derive from three parent peptides, namely β-CN (f7-28)4P, αs1-CN (f61-79)4P and αs2-CN (f7-21)4P [111]. By comparing CPP of Grana Padano and Herrgard cheese, it was clear that CPP were all progressively shortened and dephosphorylated during ripening. CPP were very resistant to enzymatic degradation, especially when SerP residue was at the N-terminal end. The number of CPP identified according to the different procedures was comparable for Grana Padano [111] and Herrgard cheese [112]. In both the cheeses, CPP were progressively shortened and dephosphorylated during ripening, with both cheeses constituting heterogeneous mixtures of peptides phosphorylated at various sites sharing N-and Cterminally truncated CPP. However, some peptides proved very resistant to enzymatic degradation, especially when SerP residue was present at the N-terminal end of CPP [111]. The only SerP residue located at the N-terminus of CPP was subjected to dephosphorylation, exposing the dephosphorylated residue to aminopeptidase action. A heterogeneous CPP pattern also differentiated the cheese samples within a given form because of the phosphatase gradient amongst peripheral and central parts of the Grana Padano cheese form (3 10 5 vs. 3 10 2 ). This is due to heat sensitivity in the temperature range 57 and 62 °C and the acid pH at which these enzymes are denatured. These data explain the discrepancy in the amount of serine, which varied by as much as 50% of SerP from the periphery towards the center of the cheese form [113]. In contrast, the CPP fraction of Herrgard cheese was more uniform, with the two cheese varieties sharing active plasmin and amino-peptidases from lactic acid bacteria. Because milk pasteurization denatures alkaline phosphatase while it activates plasmin [114], proteolysis in the above cheese is plasmin-dependent. It is therefore likely that CPP of pasteurized milk cheeses are intrinsically more stable than raw milk cheeses [111]. CPP in artisanal PDO ovine Fiore Sardo cheese have been previously reported [115]. Patterns of CPP similar to that observed for bovine cheese indicated that mechanisms of formation and degradation of CPP were similar regardless of the milk species and cheese variety. The dephosphorylation mechanism in Fiore Sardo was different from that found in Grana Padano cheese, most likely because of the use of different rennet types. In PDO Fiore Sardo cheese, no apparent difference in susceptibility to dephosphorylation was found amongst the differently located SerP peptide residues. This resulted in the simultaneous occurrence of partly dephosphorylated peptides, either internally or externally. CPP enrichment by HA, for example of pH 4. It is likely that ingested cheese carries a concentrated pH 4.6 soluble CPP fraction and a variable number of CPP according to the cheese variety. Above all, the presence and integrity of plasmin-mediated products of CN is a function of the milk, whether raw or pasteurized. Pasteurization reduces the milk plasmin activity only by ~15 percent, whereas plasmin activity increases during milk storage. UHT does not inactivate the plasmin in milk,   (Figure 5c). When comparing the PR and PM cheese, the former had a high extent of β-CN (f1-28)4P as judged by the higher levels of the peptide. This demonstrates that CPP of PR cheese are progressively transformed into a number of lower-molecular-weight peptides. In contrast, the quasi-total absence in the PM cheese of β-CN (f1-28)4P and relatively few of the various sizes β-CN-derived CPP ( Figure 6) could be the effect of the enzyme decline from the optimum level of activity to zero enzyme activity.  In PR cheese, 23 casein-derived CPP were found to derive from the internal region of αs1-CN, i.e., αs1-CN (f59-79)5P, whereas they were not detected in AA (Figure 7).

CPP in ovine cheeses
Cheeses that contain CPP are also manufactured from ovine milk. Proteolytic enzymes in Pecorino cheese originate from chymosin, pepsin and other clotting preparations such as paste rennet. These enzymatic activities are complemented by those secreted by the vegetative spores of Penicillium roqueforti during the maturation of blue-veined cheeses. The CPP patterns of Pecorino and Roquefort cheese have been characterized and main components identified. The sequence alignment of the CPP released throughout the hydrolysis of the β-CN (f1-28)4P in Pecorino and Roquefort cheeses are compared in Figure 9.
In PR cheese of different ages, the released CPP were progressively degraded at C-and Nterminal ends. CPases work from the C-terminal end and aminopeptidases from the Nterminal end, both removing the terminal amino acid residues incrementally. LAB does not produce CPases; thus, the ability to liberate the carboxyterminal amino acid and peptides is typical of the mold. The N-terminal amino acid seemed to be released faster than the C-terminal residues because of the lower activity of CPases. There are negligible differences in the CPP level of different cheese lots primarily because of the action of the enzymes from P.

Anticariogenic effect of CPP in yogurt and cheese
Due to proteolytic activity, a great number of CPP are formed in raw milk cheese. In contrast, the enzymatic digestion of proteins to peptides can be reduced by milk pasteurization. Notwithstanding this, yogurt remains a consistent source of bioavailable CPP even if milk is heated to high temperatures (90 °C, 30 min) to create an inoculation medium in which the bacteria can grow and produce lactic acid. LAB provide plenty of CPP in the form of soluble complexes with Ca 2+ that are effective in avoiding the lifethreatening calcium phosphate precipitation, enhancing the intestinal absorption of minerals and retention in the human body [34,118]. The mineral-binding power of CPP also depends on the number of binding sites and their relative accessibility [119]. Dairy products such as cheese and yogurt are both rich in multi-phosphorylated peptides capable of interacting with colloidal calcium phosphate to manifest anticariogenic properties in human and animal [120][121]13]. The mechanism of anticariogenicity might be due to a direct chemical effect of casein and calcium phosphate components [122]. Tooth enamel is a polymeric substance consisting of crystalline calcium phosphate, embedded in a protein matrix. Thus, CPP can significantly enhance localization of ACP at the tooth surface, inhibiting enamel demineralization and promoting remineralization. In the development of teeth and bone, CPP act as hydroxyapatite nucleator and control the growth of the crystals, resulting in unique crystal morphology. A new calcium phosphate remineralization technology has been recently developed based on the complex CPP-ACP [Recaldent TM CASRN691364-49-5] [66]. This preparation is claimed to stabilize calcium and phosphate ions in high concentrations by binding ACP to pellicle and plaque of the tooth surface. Moreover, CPP-ACP inhibited the adhesion of Streptococcus mutans to the tooth surface producing a copious reservoir of bioavailable calcium ions [67]. Cheese and yogurt CPP have the ability to stabilize calcium phosphate in solution, forming small CPP-ACP nanocomplexes. The calcium-binding ability of CPP has been applied by clinical dentists to show that CPP stabilize high concentrations of calcium, phosphate, and fluoride ions on the tooth surface by binding them to pellicle and plaque [66,123]. In dental plaque, CPP-ACP binds onto the surface components of the intercellular plaque matrix. Incorporation of CPP-ACP into the plaque will increase the calcium and phosphate content by forming a stable supersaturated solution of calcium phosphate. Thus, the availability of calcium in plaque provides a natural anticaries protective effect, either by suppression of demineralization promoted by fermentative acids in mouth, through an increased remineralization by binding calcium ions to teeth enamel, or possibly a combination of both. An inverse relation between plaque calcium and caries incidence has been evidenced [124][125].   [126] has demonstrated that CPP-ACP can actually remineralize subsurface lesions in human enamel, and this is indeed the basis of one claim of his patent [127]. The diffusion of available CPP-ACP in the mouth is controlled by two main factors: i) the molecular weight of the diffusing species, the square of which is inversely proportional to the diffusion coefficient; and ii) the binding characteristics of the diffusing species, which dictate how much CPP-ACP is free to diffuse at a given time [128]. At neutral pH, calcium diffusion is limited by the quantity of bound calcium, reducing the effective diffusion coefficient (De) and creating a measurable restricted effective diffusion coefficient (rDe), where rDe =De/(R + 1) and R is the ratio of bound to free calcium. A large number of potential binding sites for calcium can have significant effects on the calcium diffusion coefficient; this effect is maintained at low pH, although overall diffusion is slightly faster [129][130]. Conversely, one may infer that ACP may also bind to dental plaque and tooth enamel, thus having beneficial effects on teeth remineralization [67]. In addition, SerP residues of the CCP-HA complex are exposed to intestinal alkaline phosphatase, which favors metal ion bioavailability by releasing inorganic phosphate. Milk, ice cream, and cheese have been observed to lower the incidence of dental caries in rats [131]. Elderly people that eat cheese several times per week had a lower incidence of root surface caries development [132]. CPP of yogurt have been observed to have an inhibitory effect on demineralization and are able to promote remineralization of dental enamel [133]. Moreover, anticariogenic activity has also been reported for egg phosphopeptides (viz. phosvitin and phosphophorin) [134][135]. The heating process affects the bioavailability of CPP; for example, milk sterilization can induce dephosphorylation of phosphoseryl residues and dehydroalanine residue formation [136].  Zealand). The preparation is generally very complex and dependent on the procedure used to perform casein hydrolysis. Therefore, commercial products can be considered to be an enriched-CCP preparation containing 16% CPP without specification of the peptide size and phosphorylation degree. Preliminary analysis performed by MALDI-TOF analysis indicated that the signal in the mass spectra originated exclusively from the β-CN digestion. The intensity of non-CPP such as β-CN (f191-209), β-CN (f184-209), β-CN (f177-209) and β-CN (f170-209) was sufficiently high to obscure other CN peptides (MALDI spectrum not shown). As reported above, a number of available techniques allow the separation of CPP and non-CPP. To reduce the large dynamic range of non-CPP, HA was used for CPP enrichment [90,94,102]. CPP included multiply phosphorylated peptides (up to 4 phosphorylation residues). CPP β-CN (f1-28)4P and 3P, β-CN (f1-25)4P, 3P and 2P and β-CN (f2-25)4P, 3P and 2P were found and may be indicative of the progressive CPP dephosphorylation (MALDI spectrum not shown). Interestingly, in addition to β-CN, the commercial CPP (Tatua, NZ) also displayed αs1or αs2-CN-derived CPP, invisible or weakly visible before the sample was treated with HA (Table 6).

Examples of commercial CPP preparation
Finally, a method for reducing the complexity of peptide mixtures was the separation of non-CPP and CPP by trapping CPP on HA under neutral conditions. This could be the principle for an industrially based production of CPP.
* indicates a CPP containing the alternative non-allelic deletion of Gln 78 [137]; Phosphoserine residues are coloured red.

Examples of industrial methods for CPP preparation
Starting from CN, the overall preparation process gave 16% CPP (Figure 10), less than the theoretical yield of 23% (Ytheor =22.8%), which means approximately 20% yield on the basis of weight, a yield higher than that obtained by other researchers [138][139][140]. In their production  The example of 2000 L Na-caseinate solution containing 180 kg protein and 1 kg trypsin yielded 29 kg of calcium-enriched CPP, corresponding to a yield of ~16% (w/w) [141]. A variety of raw materials such as acid casein, sodium caseinate, and calcium caseinate, as well as skimmed raw milk, milk concentrate by ultrafiltration, pasteurized and UHT milk near the limit date for consumption, may be used as the substrate for CPP production. The optimal parameters for the hydrolysis with trypsin were 37 °C and pH between 7.5 and 8.5. The casein hydrolysate solution was roughly fractioned by ultrafiltration with appropriate membranes to obtain soluble CPP both in the "permeate" and "retentate". Lower-molecular peptides/phosphopeptides occurred in the "permeate" and larger in the "retentate". The diafiltrate containing the tryptic casein digest was loaded on the ion exchange resin, and the non-CPP flowed through and were recovered for further use, e.g., as substrate for bacterial culture. Bound CPP, free of non-CPP, are eluted using sodium hydroxide, e.g., 0.2 M, and conductivity and absorbance monitored at 280 nm. The eluate containing CPP is collected and then concentrated, typically by reverse osmosis. Peptides were pasteurized (85 °C, 15 s) and spray dried, yielding sodium enriched CPP (Na-CPP). In other cases, to obtain calciumenriched CPP, the concentrate is added with CaCl2 in excess, diafiltered, and then CPP solution concentrated by reverse osmosis until the filtrate conductivity was negligible (less than 3 mS cm -1 ). The concentrate is spray dried, and the product is labeled as calciumenriched CPP (Ca-CPP).

Traditional and new processes for the use of CPP in alimentary products
A Ca 2+ /ethanol selective precipitation procedure was used to produce a CPP and non-CPP concurrently from an alcalase digest of whole casein in which the traditional and new processes for CPP production were reported [142]. CN is trypsinized, and the pH of the solution is adjusted to 4.6 to separate the non-peptide material. The CPP-Ca 2+ aggregation was induced by ethanol addition in the supernatant and recovered as precipitate for freeze drying. In the novel process, the step of non-peptide material removal was omitted, and non-CPP (CNPP) was recovered as supernatant for use in alimentary products. For casein, the use of alcalase, a cheap enzyme suitable for industrial application, for hydrolysis was suggested [142]. The CN hydrolysates were separated into the two types of peptides using combined treatment with CaCl2 and ethanol. CPP and non-CPP comprised components with molecular weight lower than 2509 Da and 2254 Da, respectively, as determined using size exclusion HPLC. A DH of 20% for the CN hydrolysate was achieved. At the end, the recovery of CPP reached 24%. The phosphorus component of CPP was 3.08%, and nitrogen recovery was approximately 76% [142]. CPP generally had an improved solubility and transparency even under acid conditions and could be used as ingredient for beverages such as sport drinks, soft drinks, health drinks, fermented products, vitamin concentrates, fruit or fruit fractions.

Patented methods for CPP production as ingredients for alimentary products
A method for the preparation of selected anticariogenic CPP comprised the steps of complete digestion of CN as soluble monovalent cation salt with a proteolytic enzyme: the addition of a mineral acid to the solution to adjust the pH to approximately 4.7; the removal of any produced precipitate; the addition of CaCl2 to a concentration of approximately 1.0% (w/v) to cause the aggregation of CPP; the separation of the aggregated CPP from the solution through a filter with a molecular weight exclusion limit within the range 10000 to 20000 while passing the bulk of the remaining CPP in solution; the diafiltration of the separated CPP with water through a filter; the concentration of the solution; and the drying the retentate [143]. Peptides not included in the aggregation were removed by ultrafiltration/diafiltration. By this means, anticariogenic CPP at purity greater than 90% were obtained [143]. CPP including calcium, magnesium or both salts (or zinc, ferric or other salts) are produced by submitting CN to proteolytic enzyme hydrolysis, ultrafiltering the resulting hydrolyzate to produce a permeate containing CPP, adding a bivalent cation salt to the peptides to form CPP aggregates, and separating by ultrafiltration the CPP aggregates and non-CPP [144]. When CPP salts need to be converted to free phosphopeptides, they can be restored by acidification with HCl; the solution is then diafiltered extensively through a 1000 molecular weight cut-off membrane to remove excess calcium chloride.

Example of CPP applications as nutraceuticals in functional foods
The CPP-salts complex can be added to different foods. A stable acidic beverage or other alimentary products can be obtained by digesting casein with trypsin, precipitating the insoluble components at acid pH, adjusting the pH of the obtained supernatant to approximately 6.0, then adding calcium chloride and ethanol to recover an acid-soluble calcium complex of CPP and the reaction product and adding them to a soft drink [145]. The acid-soluble calcium complex of CPP enhances calcium absorption from food because calcium may be absorbed by the body in the form of soluble calcium. Acid-soluble CPP is a mixture of αs1-, αs2and β-CPP, forming essentially no turbidity in solution at pH of 3.0 or less, and having purity greater than 90%, molecular weights between approximately 2500 and 4600 Da, and the ability to solubilize at least 100 ppm calcium at a concentration of 0.5 mg/ml CPP. The acid-soluble CPP produced in vitro also have a solubilizing capability on iron. It is widely believed that iron must be solubilized for absorption through the small intestine. Accordingly, health may also be enhanced by the absorption of the soluble iron in the drink by the human body. Similarly, magnesium may be solubilized in a drink or edible product of this type [145]. Therefore, in addition to drinks, preparation of CPP with high negative charge could be used as additive for healthy foods or for dietetic or pharmaceutical compositions, as they are capable of increasing the in vivo absorption of calcium or other ions [146]. Another interesting invention relates to processes and the compositions that are useful to remineralize the teeth of mammals, particularly humans, and impart acid resistance thereto. These compositions included a gum base or carrier, sweetening agents, CPP-ACP preparation and food-grade acids [147]. Because many chewing gum and confectionery products usually contain acids, many consumers enjoying chewing gum and confectionery products ingest acids causing demineralization of the tooth surface. CPPcalcium phosphate complexes are known to have anticariogenic teeth strengthening effects that could be used address the problem of dissolution or demineralization of tooth enamel and the resultant formation of dental caries. Exogenous CPP-ACP preparations have also been added to milk in 2.0-5.0 g⁄L amounts to remineralize enamel subsurface lesions, which actually increased with respect to the control [148].
These inventions create functional foods with undoubted beneficial effects on human health, possibly promoting recalcification of bones, protecting the tooth enamel from decay and other possible health benefits.

Conclusion
Proteins are no longer considered merely nutritional components because they possess encrypted peptides with possible biological properties [149][150][151][152][153]. The cited literature has highlighted that bioactive peptides may be released in vitro or in vivo by digestive and bacterial enzymes starting from casein or generally inactive precursors [151,[154][155]. We have examined the case of casein-derived phosphopeptides that can be applied as dietary supplements in "functional foods" and produced on an industrial scale. With this, it has been demonstrated that, each time a health-enhancing nutraceutical is required for a functional food, an appropriate enzymatic hydrolysis of casein needs to be designed [156][157]. In addition to the anticariogenic activity, the most important function displayed by CPP is that soluble and encrypted casein phosphopeptides can arrive without modification of the phosphorylated sequence to the brush border membrane. It is postulated that short-sequence peptides reach their putative receptors in many tissues without modification. Whether they enter blood circulation or whether their action is restricted to a peripheral circle are current questions that await response. In conclusion, this review has considered milk and cheese CPP for specific food ingredients. The contribution of in vitro casein digests by gastric proteases to potential biologically active substances in the intestine must be simultaneously considered. Scientists are currently involved in investigations to define the in vivo fate of all of the bioactive peptides. The in vitro studies have allowed the scientists to compare the predicted and the experimental sequence of CPP. This step is preliminary to the clinical investigations designed to determine the bioactivity of the milk hydrolysates. These findings open an industrial perspective that will permit the unrestricted use of CPP in healthy promoting food application.
acknowledge the American Journal Experts Association for the text revision (http://www.journalexperts.com/). This work was partly supported by the financial aid to C.L. from MIUR, Program PRIN-2008 HNHAT7-004.