| Literature DB >> 26016654 |
Athanasios Koutsos1,2, Kieran M Tuohy2, Julie A Lovegrove3.
Abstract
There is now considerable scientific evidence that a diet rich in fruits and vegetables can improve human health and protect against chronic diseases. However, it is not clear whether different fruits and vegetables have distinct beneficial effects. Apples are among the most frequently consumed fruits and a rich source of polyphenols and fiber. A major proportion of the bioactive components in apples, including the high molecular weight polyphenols, escape absorption in the upper gastrointestinal tract and reach the large intestine relatively intact. There, they can be converted by the colonic microbiota to bioavailable and biologically active compounds with systemic effects, in addition to modulating microbial composition. Epidemiological studies have identified associations between frequent apple consumption and reduced risk of chronic diseases such as cardiovascular disease. Human and animal intervention studies demonstrate beneficial effects on lipid metabolism, vascular function and inflammation but only a few studies have attempted to link these mechanistically with the gut microbiota. This review will focus on the reciprocal interaction between apple components and the gut microbiota, the potential link to cardiovascular health and the possible mechanisms of action.Entities:
Keywords: apples; blood lipid; cardiovascular; cholesterol; fiber; gut microbiota; inflammation; juice; pectin; polyphenols; vascular
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26016654 PMCID: PMC4488768 DOI: 10.3390/nu7063959
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Composition of apples (Malus domestica), raw with skin. USDA National Nutrient Database for Standard Reference.
| Components | Value per 100 g |
|---|---|
| Energy (kcal) | 52 |
| Energy (kJ) | 218 |
| Water (g) | 85.56 |
| Total carbohydrates (g) | 13.81 |
| § Total dietary fiber (g) | 2.21 |
| § Insoluble fiber (g) | 1.54 |
| § Soluble fiber (g) | 0.67 |
| Total sugars (g) | 10.39 |
| Fructose (g) | 5.9 |
| Glucose (dextrose) (g) | 2.43 |
| Sucrose (g) | 2.07 |
| Starch (g) | 0.05 |
| Protein (g) | 0.26 |
| Total lipid (fat) (g) | 0.17 |
| Fatty acids, total polyunsaturated (g) | 0.051 |
| Fatty acids, total monounsaturated (g) | 0.007 |
| Fatty acids, total saturated (g) | 0.028 |
| Vitamin C, total ascorbic acid (mg) | 4.6 |
| Thiamin (mg) | 0.017 |
| Riboflavin (mg) | 0.026 |
| Niacin (mg) | 0.091 |
| Vitamin B-6 (mg) | 0.041 |
| Folate, DFE (μg) | 3 |
| Vitamin A, RAE (μg) | 3 |
| Vitamin A, IU (IU) | 54 |
| Vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) (mg) | 0.18 |
| Vitamin K (phylloquinone) (μg) | 2.2 |
| Calcium, Ca (mg) | 6 |
| Iron, Fe (mg) | 0.12 |
| Magnesium, Mg (mg) | 5 |
| Phosphorus, P (mg) | 11 |
| Potassium, K (mg) | 107 |
| Sodium, Na (mg) | 1 |
| Zinc, Zn (mg) | 0.04 |
| * Total polyphenols (mg) | 110.20 |
| * Flavanols (mg) | 96.33 |
| * Hydroxycinnamates (mg) | 14.21 |
| * Flavonols (mg) | 5.66 |
| * Dihydrochalcones (mg) | 4.17 |
| # Anthocyanins (mg) | 1.62 |
§ Data from Li et al., 2002 [29]; * data from Vrhovsek et al., 2004 [23]; # only in red apples.
Effects of apples and apple components on gut microbiota composition and activity.
| Type of Study | Duration-Diets-Daily Dose | Techniques Used | Results | Author |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Animal (Wistar rats) | 6 weeks, 10 rats for each group: Control diet or 5% apple pomace (AP) 1B-juice colloids extract (54.3% soluble and 2.6% insoluble fiber) or 5% AP 4B-juice colloids extract, rich in soluble fiber (78.3% soluble and 1.8% insoluble) or 5% alcohol AP extract, rich in insoluble fiber (22.9% soluble and 73.3% insoluble) | FISH (caecal) Plate count (feaces) | Sembries | |
| Animal (Wistar rats) | 4 weeks, 12 rats for each group: Control diet or Extraction juice from apple pomace | Plate count | Total SCFA and acetate: ↑, pH: ↓ | Sembries |
| Animal (Fischer rats) | 4 weeks, 8 rats for each group: Control diet or 10 g apple or 7% apple pectin | qPCR | Licht | |
| Animal | Granny Smith apple fermented | qPCR | Condezo-Hoyos | |
| Human | 2 weeks, 8 subjects: 2 apples | Plate count | Bifidobacteria: ↑ | Shinohara |
| Human Randomized, single blinded, controlled, crossover | 4 weeks, 23 subjects: Control: period of restricted diet or 550 g whole apples or 22 g apple pomace or 500 ml clear apple juice or 500 ml cloudy apple juice | qPCR | No changes in bacteria composition. pH: | Ravn-Haren |
↑: significant increase; ↓: significant decrease; SCFA: short chain fatty acids; FISH: fluorescence in situ hybridization; qPCR: quantitative polymerase chain reaction.
Effects of apples and apple components on lipid metabolism in animals.
| Animal Type- | Diets-Daily Dose | Results | Author |
|---|---|---|---|
| Wistar rats | Control diet or 15% lyophilized apple | TC: ↓ 9.3% | Aprikian |
| Wistar rats | Control cholesterol (3g/kg) diet or 10% apple pomace fiber | TC: ↓ 18.4% | Leontowicz |
| Lean (Fa/-) and obese (fa/fa) Zucker rats | Control diet or 20% lyophilized apple | TC: ↓ 22% (Obese group) | Aprikian |
| Wistar rats | Control cholesterol (1%) diet or 10% whole dry apples | TC: ↓ 20% | Leontowicz |
| Wistar mild hypercholesteolemic rats | Control diet or Freeze dried pectin, 5% (PEC) or High polyphenol cider apple extract, 10% (PL) or Mixed diet: PEC + PL | TC: ↓ 24% (PEC + PL) | Aprikian |
| Wistar rats | Control cholesterol (1%) diet or apple peel, 10% (Apeel) or apple pulp, 10% (Apulp) | TC: ↓ 21.6% (Apeel), ↓ 19.4% (Apulp) | Leontowicz |
| Sprague-Dawley rats | Control cholesterol (0.5%) diet or 0.2% apple polyphenols rich in oligomeric procyanidins (AP) or 0.5% AP or1% AP | TC: ↓ (all treatments) | Osada |
| ApoE deficient mice (apoE-KO) | Control diet or apple polyphenols (AP), equivalent to 1.6 g/day for humans orapple fiber (AF), equivalent to 50 g/day for humans or Mixed diet: AP + AF | Liver TC: ↓ 22% (AP + AF) | Auclair |
| Hypercholesterolemic hamsters | Control atherogenic diet orapple (A) or apple juice (AJ) Equivalent to daily consumption of 600 g apples or 500 ml of juice for humans | TC: ↓ 11% (A) ↓ 24% (AJ) | Decorde |
| Golden Syrian hamsters | Control atherogenic diet, 0.1% cholesterol or 0.3% apple polyphenols (AP) or 0.6% AP | HDL-C: ↑14.7% (0.3% AP) ↑16.5% (0.6% AP) | Lam |
| Zucker fatty rats | Control diet or High methoxylated apple pectin, 10% (HMAP) or β-glucan, 10% | TC: ↓ (HMAP and β-glucan) | Sanchez |
| Rabbits | Control cholesterol (1%) diet or 5 ml apple juice (low dose, LD) or 10 ml apple juice (high dose, HD) | TC: ↓ 75% (LD), ↓ 77% (HD) | Setorki |
| Wistar rats | Control diet or 5% AP: apple pomace (61% dietary fiber (DF), 0.23% polyphenols (PP)) or 5% APE: ethanol extracted apple pomace (66% DF, 0.1% PP) or 5% APA: ethanol/acetone extracted apple pomace (67% DF, 0.01% PP) | TC: ↓ 19% (AP and APA) | Kosmala |
| Wistar hypercholesterolemic rats | Control cholesterol (2%) diet 20% apples from 3 different varieties: Golden (G) Malapio da serra (MS) Bravo de esmolfe (BE) (highest polyphenol and antioxidant capacity) | TC: ↓ 21% (BE) | Serra |
| Sprague–Dawley rats | Control high fat diet or 10% apple pomace (AP) or 10% apple juice concentrate (AC) | TC: ↓ 23% (AP), ↓ 22% (AC) | Cho |
↑: significant increase compared to the control diet; ↓: significant decrease compared to the control diet; TC: total cholesterol; LDL-C: low density lipoprotein-cholesterol; HDL: high density lipoprotein; TAG: triacylglycerols; TS: total steroids; NS: neutral sterols; BA: bile acids.
Effects of apples and apple components on blood lipid levels in humans.
| Subjects-Study Duration-Design | Diets-Daily Dose | Results | Author |
|---|---|---|---|
| 25 healthy men/women | 340 g apple or 375 ml apple juice | No changes: TC, LDL-C, HDL-C and TAG | Hyson |
| 49 hypercholesterolemic, overweight women | 300 g apple or 300 g pear or 60 g oat cookies | TC: ↓ (oat group) | de Oliveira |
| 48 hypercholesterolemic men/women | Control: supplement without polyphenols or Low dose: 300 mg apple polyphenols (AP) or Medium dose: 600 mg AP or High dose: 1500 mg AP | TC: ↓ 4.5% (from baseline for High dose) | Nagasako-Akazome |
| 15 elderly | Fresh apples (2 g/kg body weight, approximately 1 apple) | No changes: TC, LDL-C, HDL-C and TAG | Avci |
| 48 moderately obese men/women | Control: capsules without polyphenols or 600 mg apple polyphenols capsules | TC: | Nagasako-Akazome |
| 46 overweight, hyperlipidemic men | Control: no apple intake or 300 g apple | No changes: TC, LDL-C and HDL-C | Vafa |
| 68 overweight men | Control: beverage without polyphenols or 750 ml cloudy apple juice | No changes: TC, LDL-C, HDL-C and TAG | Barth |
| 160 postmenopausal women | Dried plum (comparative control) or 75 g dried apples | TC: ↓ (from control group) | Chai |
| 23 healthy men/women | Control: period of restricted diet or 550 g whole apples (WA) or 22 g apple pomace (AP) or 500 ml clear apple juice (AJ) or 500 ml cloudy AJ | Treatment resulted in significant effects in TC and LDL-C. | Ravn-Haren |
| 20 healthy young men/women | 500 ml of two cloudy apple juices: 510 mg/L catechin equivalent and 60 mg/L vitamin C (VCR) or 993 mg/L catechin equivalent and 22 mg/L vitamin C (PR) | TC: ↓ 4% (VCR) | Soriano-Maldonado |
↑: significant increase; ↓: significant decrease; TC: total cholesterol; LDL-C: low density lipoprotein cholesterol; VLDL-C: very low density lipoprotein cholesterol; HDL-C: high density lipoprotein cholesterol; TAG: triacylglycerols; VFA: viscelar fat area.