Research Summary
The increase in the population of sika deer (Cervus Nippon) across Japan has led to societal issues, such as damage to agriculture and forestry, an increase in traffic accidents, and ecosystem change. To address this, deer population control through hunting has been promoted. However, while deer meat is typically consumed, uses for other parts are still at the exploration phase. In contrast, various body parts of deer, such as antlers, bones, tails and sinews have been used in traditional Chinese medicine since ancient times. To increase the usefulness of sika deer as health promoting resources, the research group evaluated the in vitro antioxidant activity of the gelatins from antlers, skins and bones of sika deer and compared with those from donkey, bovine, pig and fish (Figure 1).
Figure 1. Antioxidant activity of deer gelatins and commercially available gelatins and collagen peptides (DAG: deer antler gelatin, DSG: deer skin gelatin, DBG: deer bone gelatin, DG: Donkey skin gelatin, BG: bovine gelatin, PG: pig gelatin, FG: fish gelatin, BP: bovine collagen peptide, PP: pig collagen peptide, FP: fish collagen peptide).
Journal
Pharmacognosy Research (Published on June 13, 2024)
Title of Paper
Antioxidant Activity of Gelatins from Sika Deer (Cervus Nippon)
Authors
Kouharu Otsuki, Shizuka Uchino, Dongxia Li, Takashi Kikuchi, Ken Tei, Wei Li
DOI
10.5530/pres.16.3.70