The short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate

Background: Folic acid (FA) is added to grain products in Canada to reduce the incidence of neural tube defects. There have been concerns that FA fortification may have adverse effects on the population. L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate (L-5-methyl-THF) is an alternative form of folate and may be safer th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Harvey, Sarah
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37675
id ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-37675
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-376752013-06-05T04:19:49ZThe short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolateHarvey, SarahBackground: Folic acid (FA) is added to grain products in Canada to reduce the incidence of neural tube defects. There have been concerns that FA fortification may have adverse effects on the population. L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate (L-5-methyl-THF) is an alternative form of folate and may be safer than FA. However, L-5-methyl-THF has poor stability relative to FA limiting its use as a food fortificant. Microencapsulation of L-5-methyl-THF in a polyglycerol monostearate coating could improve its stability in food matrices. Objective: To determine if microencapsulated FA and L-5-methyl-THF, either in capsule form or in skim milk powder, increases plasma folate concentrations over 8 hours, to the same extent, compared to free-form FA and L-5-methyl-THF. Methods: In a repeated-measures crossover design, participants (n=15) were randomly administered seven treatments as single doses. The doses were based on the molar equivalent of 400 μg of FA. Treatments included: placebo, FA, microencapsulated FA, L-5-methyl-THF, microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF, microencapsulated FA in milk powder, and microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF in milk powder. Blood was collected at baseline and at frequent intervals over the 8-hour test period. Plasma folate was quantified at each time point and corrected to baseline values. Area under the curve(AUC)was calculated for each treatment and differences between treatments were evaluated using repeated-measures ANOVA. Results: The AUC values (± SEM) for all six folate treatments were significantly greater than the placebo (P<0.05). AUC for L-5-methyl-THF was greater than FA (347±35 vs. 181±12 8h.nmol/L; P<0.001). The AUC for microencapsulated FA was not different than FA (222±12 vs. 181±14 8h.nmol/L; P=0.12). However, the AUC was less for microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF than L-5-methyl-THF (147±17 vs 347±35 8h.nmol/L; P<0.001). The AUC for microencapsulated FA in milk powder was less than microencapsulated FA (120±11 vs. 222±12 8h.nmol/L; P<0.001) but microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF in milk powder was not different than microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF (178±14 vs 147±17 8h.nmol/L; P=0.284). Conclusions: L-5-methyl-THF may have greater short-term bioavailability than FA. Microencapsulation had no effect on FA but decreased the bioavailability of L-5-methyl-THF. Adding microencapsulated FA to a skim milk powder decreased the bioavailability however there was no effect on microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF.University of British Columbia2011-09-29T18:15:29Z2011-09-29T18:15:29Z20112011-09-292011-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertationhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/37675eng
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description Background: Folic acid (FA) is added to grain products in Canada to reduce the incidence of neural tube defects. There have been concerns that FA fortification may have adverse effects on the population. L-5-methyltetrahydrofolate (L-5-methyl-THF) is an alternative form of folate and may be safer than FA. However, L-5-methyl-THF has poor stability relative to FA limiting its use as a food fortificant. Microencapsulation of L-5-methyl-THF in a polyglycerol monostearate coating could improve its stability in food matrices. Objective: To determine if microencapsulated FA and L-5-methyl-THF, either in capsule form or in skim milk powder, increases plasma folate concentrations over 8 hours, to the same extent, compared to free-form FA and L-5-methyl-THF. Methods: In a repeated-measures crossover design, participants (n=15) were randomly administered seven treatments as single doses. The doses were based on the molar equivalent of 400 μg of FA. Treatments included: placebo, FA, microencapsulated FA, L-5-methyl-THF, microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF, microencapsulated FA in milk powder, and microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF in milk powder. Blood was collected at baseline and at frequent intervals over the 8-hour test period. Plasma folate was quantified at each time point and corrected to baseline values. Area under the curve(AUC)was calculated for each treatment and differences between treatments were evaluated using repeated-measures ANOVA. Results: The AUC values (± SEM) for all six folate treatments were significantly greater than the placebo (P<0.05). AUC for L-5-methyl-THF was greater than FA (347±35 vs. 181±12 8h.nmol/L; P<0.001). The AUC for microencapsulated FA was not different than FA (222±12 vs. 181±14 8h.nmol/L; P=0.12). However, the AUC was less for microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF than L-5-methyl-THF (147±17 vs 347±35 8h.nmol/L; P<0.001). The AUC for microencapsulated FA in milk powder was less than microencapsulated FA (120±11 vs. 222±12 8h.nmol/L; P<0.001) but microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF in milk powder was not different than microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF (178±14 vs 147±17 8h.nmol/L; P=0.284). Conclusions: L-5-methyl-THF may have greater short-term bioavailability than FA. Microencapsulation had no effect on FA but decreased the bioavailability of L-5-methyl-THF. Adding microencapsulated FA to a skim milk powder decreased the bioavailability however there was no effect on microencapsulated L-5-methyl-THF.
author Harvey, Sarah
spellingShingle Harvey, Sarah
The short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate
author_facet Harvey, Sarah
author_sort Harvey, Sarah
title The short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate
title_short The short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate
title_full The short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate
title_fullStr The short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate
title_full_unstemmed The short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and L-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate
title_sort short-term bioavailability of microencapsulated folic acid and l-5-methyl-tetrahydrofolate
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/37675
work_keys_str_mv AT harveysarah theshorttermbioavailabilityofmicroencapsulatedfolicacidandl5methyltetrahydrofolate
AT harveysarah shorttermbioavailabilityofmicroencapsulatedfolicacidandl5methyltetrahydrofolate
_version_ 1716587956506984448