Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato

Master of Science === Department of Human Nutrition === Weiqun Wang === Anthocyanins may prevent chronic diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, however, the anthocyanin metabolites are not well elucidated. We previously selected a purple-fleshed sweet potato clone P40 that contained ant...

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Main Author: Chen, Tzu-Yu
Language:en_US
Published: Kansas State University 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2097/13764
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spelling ndltd-KSU-oai-krex.k-state.edu-2097-137642017-03-03T15:44:52Z Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweet potato Chen, Tzu-Yu Anthocyanin Purple sweet potato Bioavailability Nutrition (0570) Master of Science Department of Human Nutrition Weiqun Wang Anthocyanins may prevent chronic diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, however, the anthocyanin metabolites are not well elucidated. We previously selected a purple-fleshed sweet potato clone P40 that contained anthocyanins at up to 7.5 g/kg dry matter, most of which are cyanidin and peonidin derivatives. The main objective of this study is to identify anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed 20-30% of purple sweet potato P40 (287 mg and 430 mg peonidin-3-glucoside equivalent /kg body weight) diet for 6 weeks. Plasma, liver, and feces were analyzed for anthocyanin metabolites using HPLC/MS and MALDI-TOF-MS. Fifteen hours after consumption of P40 diet, we identified 4 anthocyanin metabolites cyanidin 3,5- diglucoside; cyanidin 3-sophoroside-5-glucoside; cyanidin3-p-hydroxybenzoylsophroside-5-glucoside; and peonidin 3-p-hydroxybenzoylsophroside-5-glucoside in fecal samples. No anthocyanin metabolites were detected in plasma or liver extracts by HPLC/MS or MALDI-TOF-MS. The results indicate that anthocyanin metabolites in fecal samples might provide health benefits for colonic mucosal cells. However, the lack metabolites in both plasma and liver samples suggest a continuous intake of the anthocyanins may be required for systemic benefits due to their quick degradation and low bioavailability. 2012-04-30T18:11:48Z 2012-04-30T18:11:48Z 2012-04-30 2012 May Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/2097/13764 en_US Kansas State University
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Anthocyanin
Purple sweet potato
Bioavailability
Nutrition (0570)
spellingShingle Anthocyanin
Purple sweet potato
Bioavailability
Nutrition (0570)
Chen, Tzu-Yu
Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato
description Master of Science === Department of Human Nutrition === Weiqun Wang === Anthocyanins may prevent chronic diseases such as cancer and cardiovascular disease, however, the anthocyanin metabolites are not well elucidated. We previously selected a purple-fleshed sweet potato clone P40 that contained anthocyanins at up to 7.5 g/kg dry matter, most of which are cyanidin and peonidin derivatives. The main objective of this study is to identify anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed 20-30% of purple sweet potato P40 (287 mg and 430 mg peonidin-3-glucoside equivalent /kg body weight) diet for 6 weeks. Plasma, liver, and feces were analyzed for anthocyanin metabolites using HPLC/MS and MALDI-TOF-MS. Fifteen hours after consumption of P40 diet, we identified 4 anthocyanin metabolites cyanidin 3,5- diglucoside; cyanidin 3-sophoroside-5-glucoside; cyanidin3-p-hydroxybenzoylsophroside-5-glucoside; and peonidin 3-p-hydroxybenzoylsophroside-5-glucoside in fecal samples. No anthocyanin metabolites were detected in plasma or liver extracts by HPLC/MS or MALDI-TOF-MS. The results indicate that anthocyanin metabolites in fecal samples might provide health benefits for colonic mucosal cells. However, the lack metabolites in both plasma and liver samples suggest a continuous intake of the anthocyanins may be required for systemic benefits due to their quick degradation and low bioavailability.
author Chen, Tzu-Yu
author_facet Chen, Tzu-Yu
author_sort Chen, Tzu-Yu
title Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato
title_short Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato
title_full Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato
title_fullStr Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato
title_full_unstemmed Pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato
title_sort pilot study: identification of anthocyanin metabolites in the mice fed purple-fleshed sweetpotato
publisher Kansas State University
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2097/13764
work_keys_str_mv AT chentzuyu pilotstudyidentificationofanthocyaninmetabolitesinthemicefedpurplefleshedsweetpotato
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