Addition of flavonols and polysaccharides as excipient ingredients into epicatechin rich green tea extract inhibited free radical formation and glucose uptake.
Food Funct
; 11(4): 3105-3111, 2020 Apr 30.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-32196040
It was revealed that excipient ingredients such as flavonols (FVN) or polysaccharides (GTP) which could be derived from green tea enhanced catechin absorption. We hypothesized that the addition of FVN or GTP as excipient ingredients into epicatechin rich green tea extracts (GTE) may improve the health benefits that accompany its consumption. When FVN8.7 (8.7% of GTE, w/w) was added to the GTE (20 mg) as an excipient ingredient, the bioaccessibility and intestinal absorption of total epicatechins was 1.2 and 1.5 times higher than that of only GTE, respectively. This was due to the free radical scavenging capacity of flavonols, showing 114.23 ± 3.07 µmol TE per g for GTE 100 + FVN8.7 and 113.64 ± 1.61 µmol TE per g for GTE 100 + FVN2, respectively. This was significantly higher than the GTE or GTE 100 + OW2 (onion peel and whangchil extracts, 2% of GTE, w/w) which have the same amount of total flavonols. Regarding potential hypoglycemic effects, co-digestion of GTE (20 mg) + green tea polysaccharides (2 mg) + FVN (5 mg) with wheat starch significantly reduced glucose intestinal absorption by 41.85 ± 1.75% compared to only the wheat starch. The results from the current study suggest that whole green tea components rich in flavonols and polysaccharides could be potential hypoglycemic excipient ingredients for green tea catechins.
Texto completo:
1
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Polisacáridos
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Té
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Catequina
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Flavonoles
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Metabolismo de los Hidratos de Carbono
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Excipientes
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Radicales Libres
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Food Funct
Año:
2020
Tipo del documento:
Article