Bioaccessibility during In Vitro Digestion and Antiproliferative
Effect of Bioactive Compounds from Andean Berry (Vaccinium
meridionale Swartz) Juice
Posted on 2018-06-18 - 00:00
Berry consumption is associated with
colorectal-cancer chemoprevention,
but digestive conditions can affect this property. The bioaccessibility
and apparent permeability coefficients of bioactive compounds from
Andean Berry Juice (ABJ) after in vitro gastrointestinal digestion
and colonic fermentation were analyzed. The antiproliferative effect
of the fermented nondigestible fraction was evaluated against SW480
colon-adenocarcinoma cells. Gallic acid displayed the highest bioaccessibility
in the mouth, stomach, small intestine, and colon. However, chlorogenic
acid exhibited the highest apparent permeability coefficients (up
to 1.98 × 10–4 cm/s). The colonic-fermentation
fraction showed an increase of ≥50% antiproliferative activity
against SW480 cells (19.32%, v/v), equivalent to those of gallic acid
(13.04 μg/g), chlorogenic acid (7.07 μg/g), caffeic acid
(0.40 μg/g), ellagic acid (7.32 μg/g), rutin (6.50 μg/g),
raffinose (0.14 mg/g), stachyose (0.70 mg/g), and xylose (9.41 mg/g).
Bioactive compounds from ABJ are bioaccessible through the gastrointestinal
tract and colon fermentation, resulting in antiproliferative activity.
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Agudelo, Carlos
D.; Luzardo-Ocampo, Ivan; Campos-Vega, Rocio; Loarca-Piña, Guadalupe; Maldonado-Celis, María E. (2018). Bioaccessibility during In Vitro Digestion and Antiproliferative
Effect of Bioactive Compounds from Andean Berry (Vaccinium
meridionale Swartz) Juice. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jafc.8b01604