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Bioavailability of chlorogenic acids following acute ingestion of coffee by humans with an ileostomy.
Arch Biochem Biophys. 2010 Sep 01; 501(1):98-105.AB

Abstract

The intestinal absorption and metabolism of 385 micromol chlorogenic acids following a single intake of 200 mL of instant coffee by human volunteers with an ileostomy was investigated. HPLC-MS(3) analysis of 0-24h post-ingestion ileal effluent revealed the presence of 274+/-28 micromol of chlorogenic acids and their metabolites accounting for 71+/-7% of intake. Of the compounds recovered, 78% comprised parent compounds initially present in the coffee, and 22% were metabolites including free and sulfated caffeic and ferulic acids. Over a 24h period after ingestion of the coffee, excretion of chlorogenic acid metabolites in urine accounted for 8+/-1% of intake, the main compounds being ferulic acid-4-O-sulfate, caffeic acid-3-O-sulfate, isoferulic acid-3-O-glucuronide and dihydrocaffeic acid-3-O-sulfate. In contrast, after drinking a similar coffee, urinary excretion by humans with an intact colon corresponded to 29+/-4% of chlorogenic acid intake. This difference was due to the excretion of higher levels of dihydroferulic acid and feruloylglycine together with sulfate and glucuronide conjugates of dihydrocaffeic and dihydroferulic acids. This highlights the importance of colonic metabolism. Comparison of the data obtained in the current study with that of Stalmach et al. facilitated elucidation of the pathways involved in post-ingestion metabolism of chlorogenic acids and also helped distinguish between compounds absorbed in the small and the large intestine.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Plant Products and Human Nutrition Group, Graham Kerr Building, Faculty of Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G128QQ, UK.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

20226754

Citation

Stalmach, Angélique, et al. "Bioavailability of Chlorogenic Acids Following Acute Ingestion of Coffee By Humans With an Ileostomy." Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, vol. 501, no. 1, 2010, pp. 98-105.
Stalmach A, Steiling H, Williamson G, et al. Bioavailability of chlorogenic acids following acute ingestion of coffee by humans with an ileostomy. Arch Biochem Biophys. 2010;501(1):98-105.
Stalmach, A., Steiling, H., Williamson, G., & Crozier, A. (2010). Bioavailability of chlorogenic acids following acute ingestion of coffee by humans with an ileostomy. Archives of Biochemistry and Biophysics, 501(1), 98-105. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.abb.2010.03.005
Stalmach A, et al. Bioavailability of Chlorogenic Acids Following Acute Ingestion of Coffee By Humans With an Ileostomy. Arch Biochem Biophys. 2010 Sep 1;501(1):98-105. PubMed PMID: 20226754.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Bioavailability of chlorogenic acids following acute ingestion of coffee by humans with an ileostomy. AU - Stalmach,Angélique, AU - Steiling,Heike, AU - Williamson,Gary, AU - Crozier,Alan, Y1 - 2010/03/11/ PY - 2010/01/19/received PY - 2010/03/03/revised PY - 2010/03/06/accepted PY - 2010/3/16/entrez PY - 2010/3/17/pubmed PY - 2010/9/21/medline SP - 98 EP - 105 JF - Archives of biochemistry and biophysics JO - Arch Biochem Biophys VL - 501 IS - 1 N2 - The intestinal absorption and metabolism of 385 micromol chlorogenic acids following a single intake of 200 mL of instant coffee by human volunteers with an ileostomy was investigated. HPLC-MS(3) analysis of 0-24h post-ingestion ileal effluent revealed the presence of 274+/-28 micromol of chlorogenic acids and their metabolites accounting for 71+/-7% of intake. Of the compounds recovered, 78% comprised parent compounds initially present in the coffee, and 22% were metabolites including free and sulfated caffeic and ferulic acids. Over a 24h period after ingestion of the coffee, excretion of chlorogenic acid metabolites in urine accounted for 8+/-1% of intake, the main compounds being ferulic acid-4-O-sulfate, caffeic acid-3-O-sulfate, isoferulic acid-3-O-glucuronide and dihydrocaffeic acid-3-O-sulfate. In contrast, after drinking a similar coffee, urinary excretion by humans with an intact colon corresponded to 29+/-4% of chlorogenic acid intake. This difference was due to the excretion of higher levels of dihydroferulic acid and feruloylglycine together with sulfate and glucuronide conjugates of dihydrocaffeic and dihydroferulic acids. This highlights the importance of colonic metabolism. Comparison of the data obtained in the current study with that of Stalmach et al. facilitated elucidation of the pathways involved in post-ingestion metabolism of chlorogenic acids and also helped distinguish between compounds absorbed in the small and the large intestine. SN - 1096-0384 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/20226754/Bioavailability_of_chlorogenic_acids_following_acute_ingestion_of_coffee_by_humans_with_an_ileostomy_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S0003-9861(10)00090-1 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -