Bioaccessibility of polyphenols and antioxidant properties of the white grape by simulated digestion and Caco-2 cell assays: Comparative study with its winemaking product

Publication date: Available online 16 May 2019Source: Food Research InternationalAuthor(s): Mariana S. Lingua, Martín G. Theumer, Paula Kruzynski, Daniel A. Wunderlin, María V. BaroniAbstractThe primary objective of this study was to assess the changes on phenolic composition and AC (antioxidant capacity) of white grape and its winemaking product, during in vitro gastrointestinal (GI) digestion. Phenolic compounds were evaluated by HPLC-MS/MS. The AC was measured by in vitro (FRAP, ABTS and DPPH) and cellular (Caco-2 cells) assays. Digestion had a reducing effect on phenolic content, being only 31% and 67% of native polyphenols from grapes and wines, respectively, potentially bioaccessible. At same polyphenol concentration, cellular AC of nondigested and digested foods was the same, indicating that changes in phenolic profile did not modify the bioactivity. Phenolic acids, in addition to quercetin, were the most resistant polyphenols to digestion, and would be the most relevant to explain the biological activity of digested foods. Results indicate that the changes occurred in the native phenolic profile of foods as a consequence of GI digestion, do not modify the bioactivity of white grapes and wines.Graphical abstract
Source: Food Research International - Category: Food Science Source Type: research