TY - JOUR
T1 - Colonic metabolism of polyphenols from coffee, green tea, and hazelnut skins
AU - Calani, Luca
AU - Dall'Asta, Margherita
AU - Derlindati, Eleonora
AU - Scazzina, Francesca
AU - Bruni, Renato
AU - Del Rio, Daniele
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - Dietary polyphenolic compounds are poorly absorbed in the small intestine. The absorbed fraction follows the common metabolic pathway of drugs, undergoing phase II enzymatic detoxification with the conjugation of glucuronic acid, sulfate, and methyl groups. However, the unabsorbed fraction can reach the colon, becoming available for the wide array of enzymes produced by the local commensal microbiota. Gut bacteria can hydrolyze glycosides, glucuronides, sulfates, amides, esters, and lactones and are able to break down the polyphenolic skeleton and perform reactions of reduction, decarboxylation, demethylation, and dehydroxylation. These complex modifications generate several low-molecular-weight metabolites that can be efficiently absorbed in situ, subsequently undergoing further phase II metabolism, locally and/or at the liver level, before entering the systemic blood circulation and finally being excreted in urine in substantial quantities that exceed the excretion of phenolic metabolites formed in the upper gastrointestinal tract. This brief work focuses on the phenolic composition and colonic microbial transformation of 2 of the most polyphenol-rich dietary sources, namely, green tea and coffee, and a new interesting and innovative ingredient, hazelnut skin, recently evaluated as one of the richest edible sources of polyphenolic compounds. © 2012 by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
AB - Dietary polyphenolic compounds are poorly absorbed in the small intestine. The absorbed fraction follows the common metabolic pathway of drugs, undergoing phase II enzymatic detoxification with the conjugation of glucuronic acid, sulfate, and methyl groups. However, the unabsorbed fraction can reach the colon, becoming available for the wide array of enzymes produced by the local commensal microbiota. Gut bacteria can hydrolyze glycosides, glucuronides, sulfates, amides, esters, and lactones and are able to break down the polyphenolic skeleton and perform reactions of reduction, decarboxylation, demethylation, and dehydroxylation. These complex modifications generate several low-molecular-weight metabolites that can be efficiently absorbed in situ, subsequently undergoing further phase II metabolism, locally and/or at the liver level, before entering the systemic blood circulation and finally being excreted in urine in substantial quantities that exceed the excretion of phenolic metabolites formed in the upper gastrointestinal tract. This brief work focuses on the phenolic composition and colonic microbial transformation of 2 of the most polyphenol-rich dietary sources, namely, green tea and coffee, and a new interesting and innovative ingredient, hazelnut skin, recently evaluated as one of the richest edible sources of polyphenolic compounds. © 2012 by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
KW - coffee
KW - green tea
KW - hazelnut skin
KW - microbiota
KW - polyphenols
KW - coffee
KW - green tea
KW - hazelnut skin
KW - microbiota
KW - polyphenols
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/163875
U2 - 10.1097/MCG.0b013e318264e82b
DO - 10.1097/MCG.0b013e318264e82b
M3 - Article
SN - 0192-0790
VL - 46
SP - S95-S99
JO - Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology
JF - Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology
ER -