Authors
Michael N Clifford, Iziar A Ludwig, Gema Pereira-Caro, Laila Zeraik, Gina Borges, Tahani M Almutairi, Sara Dobani, Letizia Bresciani, Pedro Mena, Chris IR Gill, Alan Crozier
Publication date
2024/2/13
Source
Redox Biology
Pages
103068
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Following ingestion of fruits, vegetables and derived products, (poly)phenols that are not absorbed in the upper gastrointestinal tract pass to the colon, where they undergo microbiota-mediated ring fission resulting in the production of a diversity of low molecular weight phenolic catabolites, which appear in the circulatory system and are excreted in urine along with their phase II metabolites. There is increasing interest in these catabolites because of their potential bioactivity and their use as biomarkers of (poly)phenol intake. Investigating the fate of dietary (poly)phenolics in the colon has become confounded as a result of the recent realisation that many of the phenolics appearing in biofluids can also be derived from the aromatic amino acids, l-phenylalanine and l-tyrosine, and to a lesser extent catecholamines, in reactions that can be catalysed by both colonic microbiota and endogenous mammalian enzymes …
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