An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran

The effects of baking, bran particle size and other meal components on the relative availability of the endogenous iron of wheat bran were investigated using an in vitro method. The method simulated gastrointestinal digestion and measured soluble, low molecular weight iron as an estimate of availabl...

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Main Author: Pegg, Deborah Lynn
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24749
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-247492018-01-05T17:42:45Z An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran Pegg, Deborah Lynn The effects of baking, bran particle size and other meal components on the relative availability of the endogenous iron of wheat bran were investigated using an in vitro method. The method simulated gastrointestinal digestion and measured soluble, low molecular weight iron as an estimate of available iron. The wheat bran was incorporated into a muffin product to simulate a common domestic vehicle for fiber consumption. The muffins were blended to a slurry, adjusted to pH 2 and incubated with pepsin. Dialysis was used to adjust the pH to intestinal levels and digestion was continued with the addition of pancreatin and bile extract. Then iron from the digestion mixture which had diffused across a semipermeable membrane (6000 to 8000 molecular weight cutoff) was quantified as percent dialyzable iron. It was found that under the conditions of the in vitro estimation, essentially no iron was available from the bran when the muffins were combined with water. When the muffins were combined with orange juice there was a very significant enhancement of iron availability. The influence of orange juice was evaluated by comparing the relative effects of constituent organic acids. Muffins were blended to a slurry with aqueous solutions containing either ascorbic acid, citric acid or a combination of ascorbic and citric acids in amounts assumed to be present in orange juice. Combination with ascorbic and citric acids together showed significantly greater enhancement of iron availability from wheat bran than citric acid alone which produced significantly more dialyzable iron than ascorbic acid alone. However, the increase in available iron produced by the combination of constituent organic acids was only about half of that produced by orange juice. It was also found that bran particle size had no significant effect on relative iron availability under the conditions of this study. As well, it was determined that there was a significant decrease in iron availability due to baking. Finally, the results of this study indicated that further research is necessary to examine the chemistry of iron and iron binding as related to the availability of iron from wheat bran. Land and Food Systems, Faculty of Graduate 2010-05-16T04:52:41Z 2010-05-16T04:52:41Z 1983 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24749 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
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language English
sources NDLTD
description The effects of baking, bran particle size and other meal components on the relative availability of the endogenous iron of wheat bran were investigated using an in vitro method. The method simulated gastrointestinal digestion and measured soluble, low molecular weight iron as an estimate of available iron. The wheat bran was incorporated into a muffin product to simulate a common domestic vehicle for fiber consumption. The muffins were blended to a slurry, adjusted to pH 2 and incubated with pepsin. Dialysis was used to adjust the pH to intestinal levels and digestion was continued with the addition of pancreatin and bile extract. Then iron from the digestion mixture which had diffused across a semipermeable membrane (6000 to 8000 molecular weight cutoff) was quantified as percent dialyzable iron. It was found that under the conditions of the in vitro estimation, essentially no iron was available from the bran when the muffins were combined with water. When the muffins were combined with orange juice there was a very significant enhancement of iron availability. The influence of orange juice was evaluated by comparing the relative effects of constituent organic acids. Muffins were blended to a slurry with aqueous solutions containing either ascorbic acid, citric acid or a combination of ascorbic and citric acids in amounts assumed to be present in orange juice. Combination with ascorbic and citric acids together showed significantly greater enhancement of iron availability from wheat bran than citric acid alone which produced significantly more dialyzable iron than ascorbic acid alone. However, the increase in available iron produced by the combination of constituent organic acids was only about half of that produced by orange juice. It was also found that bran particle size had no significant effect on relative iron availability under the conditions of this study. As well, it was determined that there was a significant decrease in iron availability due to baking. Finally, the results of this study indicated that further research is necessary to examine the chemistry of iron and iron binding as related to the availability of iron from wheat bran. === Land and Food Systems, Faculty of === Graduate
author Pegg, Deborah Lynn
spellingShingle Pegg, Deborah Lynn
An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran
author_facet Pegg, Deborah Lynn
author_sort Pegg, Deborah Lynn
title An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran
title_short An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran
title_full An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran
title_fullStr An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran
title_full_unstemmed An in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran
title_sort in vitro estimation of relative iron availability from wheat bran
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/24749
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