Hyaluronic acid from bluefin tuna by-product: Structural analysis and pharmacological activities

The fishing and aquaculture industries generate a huge amount of waste during processing and preservation operations, especially those of tuna. Recovering these by-products is a major economic and environmental challenge for manufacturers seeking to produce new active biomolecules of interest. A new...

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Published inInternational journal of biological macromolecules Vol. 264; no. Pt 1; p. 130424
Main Authors Elhiss, Sawsen, Hamdi, Assia, Chahed, Latifa, Boisson-Vidal, Catherine, Majdoub, Hatem, Bouchemal, Nadia, Laschet, Jamila, Kraiem, Jamil, Le Cerf, Didier, Maaroufi, Raoui Mounir, Chaubet, Frédéric, Ben Mansour, Mohamed
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Netherlands Elsevier B.V 01.04.2024
Elsevier
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Summary:The fishing and aquaculture industries generate a huge amount of waste during processing and preservation operations, especially those of tuna. Recovering these by-products is a major economic and environmental challenge for manufacturers seeking to produce new active biomolecules of interest. A new hyaluronic acid was extracted from bluefin tuna's vitreous humour to assess its antioxidant and pharmacological activities. The characterization by infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR), nuclear magnetic resonance ((1D1H) and 2D (1H COSY, 1H/13C HSQC)) and size exclusion chromatography (SEC/MALS/DRI/VD) revealed that the extracted polysaccharide was a hyaluronic acid with high uronic acid content (55.8 %) and a weight average molecular weight of 888 kDa. This polymer possesses significant anti-radical activity and ferrous chelating capacity. In addition, pharmacological evaluation of its anti-inflammatory and analgesic potential, using preclinical models, in comparison with reference drugs (Dexamethasone, diclofenac, and acetylsalicylate of lysine), revealed promising anti-inflammatory activity as well as interesting peripheral and central antinociceptive activity. Therefore, our new hyaluronic acid compound may therefore serve as a potential drug candidate for the treatment of pain sensation and inflammation of various pathological origins. [Display omitted] •A novel hyaluronic acid was extracted from the vitreous humour of bluefin tuna.•The physicochemical properties of the isolated hyaluronic acid were studied.•The isolated hyaluronic acid demonstrated significant pharmacological properties.•The hyaluronic acid demonstrated promising potential as an anti-inflammatory agent.
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ISSN:0141-8130
1879-0003
1879-0003
DOI:10.1016/j.ijbiomac.2024.130424