| Literature DB >> 27626402 |
Fereidoon Shahidi1, Ju-Dong Yeo2.
Abstract
This contribution provides a review of the topic of insoluble-bound phenolics, especially their localization, synthesis, transfer and formation in plant cells, as well as their metabolism in the human digestive system and corresponding bioactivities. In addition, their release from the food matrix during food processing and extraction methods are discussed. The synthesis of phenolics takes place mainly at the endoplasmic reticulum and they are then transferred to each organ through transport proteins such as the ATP-binding cassette (ABC) and multidrug and toxic compound extrusion (MATE) transporter at the organ's compartment membrane or via transport vesicles such as cytoplasmic and Golgi vesicles, leading to the formation of soluble and insoluble-bound phenolics at the vacuole and cell wall matrix, respectively. This part has not been adequately discussed in the food science literature, especially regarding the synthesis site and their transfer at the cellular level, thus this contribution provides valuable information to the involved scientists. The bound phenolics cannot be absorbed at the small intestine as the soluble phenolics do (5%-10%), thus passing into the large intestine and undergoing fermentation by a number of microorganisms, partially released from cell wall matrix of foods. Bound phenolics such as phenolic acids and flavonoids display strong bioactivities such as anticancer, anti-inflammation and cardiovascular disease ameliorating effects. They can be extracted by several methods such as acid, alkali and enzymatic hydrolysis to quantify their contents in foods. In addition, they can also be released from the cell wall matrix during food processing procedures such as fermentation, germination, roasting, extrusion cooking and boiling. This review provides critical information for better understanding the insoluble-bound phenolics in food and fills an existing gap in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: bioactivity; bound phenolics; localization and transfer of phenolics; release from cell wall matrix
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27626402 PMCID: PMC6274541 DOI: 10.3390/molecules21091216
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Localization of soluble and insoluble-bound phenolics in plant cell (other organs are not shown).
Figure 2Representative covalent bonds found in insoluble-bound phenolics; (a) ester bond of 4-hydroxy benzoic acid (b) ether bond of catechin and (c) carbon-carbon bond of naringenin attached to cellulose molecule.
Figure 3Transfer mechanisms of phenolics after synthesis at the endoplasmic reticulum in plant cell. (ABC: ATP-binding cassette; MATE: multidrug and toxic compound extrusion).
Insoluble-bound phenolic acids in cereals, legumes and other seeds.
| Sources | Bound Phenolic Acids (μg/g, DW) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Cereals | ||
| Black rice | Protocatechuic (162.1), 4-hydroxybenzoic (21.2), vanillic (27.7), | [ |
| Maize (Pericarp) | [ | |
| Maize (Germ) | ||
| Maize (endosperm) | ||
| Durum wheat | Gallic (6.0), 4-hydroxybenzoic (4.4), vanillic (2.9), syringic (2.9), | [ |
| Bread wheat | Gallic (5.9), 4-hydroxybenzoic (4.7), vanillic (2.9), Syringic (3.7), | |
| Barley | Gallic (5.5), protocatechuic (4.9), 4-hydroxybenzoic (5.6), vanillic (5.4), caffeic (4.6), syringic (4.6), | |
| Oat | 4-Hydroxybenzoic (6.3), vanillic (12.9), caffeic (6.5), syringic (8.4), | |
| Rye | Gallic (7.1), protocatechuic (4.2), 4-hydroxybenzoic (5.3), vanillic (4.1), caffeic (5.1), syringic (3.4), | |
| Rice | Gallic (5.1), 4-hydroxybenzoic (4.5), vanillic (1.7), syringic (2.8), | |
| Triticale | Gallic (4.8), protocatechuic (3.8), 4-hydroxybenzoic (5.4), vanillic (5.4), caffeic (4.3), syringic (4.1), | |
| Corn | 4-Hydroxybenzoic (4.7), vanillic (4.9), caffeic (4.9), syringic (4.2), | |
| Millet (7 cultivars) | Ferulic (178.0-1685.0) and | [ |
| Legumes | ||
| Lentils (6 cultivars) | Gallic acid (0.0-1.8), protocatechuic acid (0.0-4.4), | [ |
| Cranberry beans (7 cultivars) | [ | |
| Soy isoflavone concentrate | [ | |
| Mung bean | Gallic (3.0), caffeic (0.3), | [ |
| Pinto bean | Protocatechuic (25.6), | [ |
| Black bean | Gallic (41.1), protocatechuic (14.1), | |
| Kidney bean | Protocatechuic (64.4), | |
| Cowpea | Gallic (5.4) acid | [ |
| Chickpea | Gallic (82.8) and protocatechuic (110.9) acid | [ |
| Cow gram | Protocatechuic (172.6) acid | |
| Flower waist bean | Protocatechuic (128.4) acid | |
| Hyacinth bean | Protocatechuic (111.8) acid | |
| Pearl bean | Protocatechuic (121.9) acid | |
| Oilseeds | ||
| Sunflower | Gallic (11.2), protocatechuic (50.8), caffeic (25.5), | [ |
| Rapeseed meal (seven cultivars) | 389-1050 μg sinapic acid equivalent/g DW (Main phenoic acids: sinapic, | [ |
| Flaxseed | [ | |
| Gallic (15.9) and | [ | |
| Soy bean | Gallic (64.2), protocatechuic (238.8), vanillic (88.7), syringic (121.6), | [ |
| Fruit seeds | ||
| Blackberry seed meal | Protocatechuic (2.2), | [ |
| Black raspberry seed meal | Protocatechuic (0.9), | |
| Blueberry seed meal | Protocatechuic (0.3), |
Insoluble-bound flavonoids in cereals, legumes and other seeds.
| Sources | Bound Flavonoids (μg/g, DW) | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Cereals | ||
| Maize (pericarp) | Kaempferol (15.9) | [ |
| Maize (germ) | Quercetin (28.8) | |
| Quinoa seed | Catechin (16.28), quercetin (47.2) and kaempferol (30.4) | [ |
| Dent corn (pericarp portion) | Quercetin (35.9) | [ |
| Flint corn (germ portion) | Quercetin (12.0) | |
| Rice | 240 μg catechin equivalent/g DW | [ |
| Corn | 760 μg catechin equivalent/g DW | |
| Wheat | 430 μg catechin equivalent/g DW | |
| Barley | 370 μg catechin equivalent/g DW | |
| Legumes | ||
| Lentils (6 cultivars) | Catechin (15.0–78.4), epicatechin (0.5–7.9), (+)-catechin-3-glucoside (0.0–122.0) and luteolin 3′-7-diglucoside (0.0–49.3) | [ |
| Cranberry beans (4 cultivars) | Kaempferol (0.2–0.3) | [ |
| Mung bean | Quercetin (0.2) and kaempferol (0.1) | [ |
| Black bean | (+)-Catechin (109.7), epicatechin (93.8), rutin (93.8), isoquercitrin (462.3) and quercetin (86.6) | [ |
| Cow gram | Quercitrin (105.4) | |
| Hyacinth bean | Quercitrin (91.9) | |
| Pearl bean | (+)-Catechin (100.7) | |
| Red bean | Rutin (89.5) | |
| Red kidney bean | Catechin (88.2) and isoquercitrin (97.1) | |
| Spring bay bean | Catechin (158.8), rutin (124.2), isoquercitrin (85.7) and quercetin (86.8) | |
| Oilseeds | ||
| Catechin (7490.0), epicatechin (810.0) and quercetin (18.7) | [ | |
| Sunflower | Quercetin (1.5), kaempferol (0.5) and apigenin (2.9) | [ |
| Soy bean | Epicatechin (95.2), isoquercitrin (396.0) and quercetin (101.0) | [ |
| Fruit seeds | ||
| Blackberry | (+)-Catechin (1.0), (−)-epicatechin (1.1), quercetin (2.0), quercetin pentose (3.3), epicatechin gallate (1.1) and quercetin-3- | [ |
| Black raspberry | (+)-Catechin (0.4), (−)-epicatechin (3.1), quercetin (3.2), epigallocatechin (1.3), epicatechin gallate (0.9) and quercetin-3- | |
| Blueberry | (+)-Catechin (0.7), (−)-epicatechin (0.07), quercetin (0.2), epigallocatechin (0.4), myricetin (0.2), quercetin pentose (0.5) and kaempferol hexoside (0.6) |