Title
Susceptibility of anthocyanins to ex vivo degradation in human saliva
Date Issued
15 November 2012
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Kamonpatana K.
Chitchumroonchokchai C.
Morenocruz M.
Riedl K.M.
Kumar P.
Failla M.L.
The Ohio State University
Abstract
Some fruits and their anthocyanin-rich extracts have been reported to exhibit chemopreventive activity in the oral cavity. Insights regarding oral metabolism of anthocyanins remain limited. Anthocyanin-rich extracts from blueberry, chokeberry, black raspberry, red grape, and strawberry were incubated ex vivo with human saliva from 14 healthy subjects. All anthocyanins were partially degraded in saliva. Degradation of chokeberry anthocyanins in saliva was temperature dependent and decreased by heating saliva to 80 °C and after removal of cells. Glycosides of delphinidin and petunidin were more susceptible to degradation than those of cyanidin, pelargonidin, peonidin and malvidin in both intact and artificial saliva. Stability of di- and tri-saccharide conjugates of anthocyanidins slightly, but significantly, exceeded that of monosaccharide compounds. Ex vivo degradation of anthocyanins in saliva was significantly decreased after oral rinsing with antibacterial chlorhexidine. These results suggest that anthocyanin degradation in the mouth is structure-dependent and largely mediated by oral microbiota. © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Start page
738
End page
747
Volume
135
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biotecnología agrícola, Biotecnología alimentaria Nutrición, Dietética
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-84863922960
PubMed ID
Source
Food Chemistry
ISSN of the container
18737072
Sponsor(s)
The project was supported in part by The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC). We thank Dr. Joseph Scheerens of the OARDC for obtaining black raspberries from Maurer’s farm. We also thank Artemis International for the gift of chokeberry samples. We are grateful to Dr. Steven Schwartz of Department of Food Science and Technology for providing access to the HPLC–TOF–MS in the Nutrient and Phytochemical Analytic Shared Resource Core of the OSU Comprehensive Cancer Center (NPASR).
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus