| Literature DB >> 28703588 |
Patrick Schaub1, Florian Wüst1, Julian Koschmieder1, Qiuju Yu1, Parminder Virk2, Joe Tohme3, Peter Beyer1.
Abstract
Provitamin A biofortification, the provision of provitamin A carotenoids through agriculture, is regarded as an effective and sustainable intervention to defeat vitamin A deficiency, representing a global health problem. This food-based intervention has been questioned in conjunction with negative outcomes for smokers and asbestos-exposed populations of the CARET and ATBC trials in which very high doses of β-carotene were supplemented. The current notion that β-carotene cleavage products (apocarotenoids) represented the harmful agents is the basis of the here-presented research. We quantitatively analyzed numerous plant food items and concluded that neither the amounts of apocarotenoids nor β-carotene provided by plant tissues, be they conventional or provitamin A-biofortified, pose an increased risk. We also investigated β-carotene degradation pathways over time. This reveals a substantial nonenzymatic proportion of carotene decay and corroborates the quantitative relevance of highly oxidized β-carotene polymers that form in all plant tissues investigated.Entities:
Keywords: apocarotenoids; biofortification; carotenoid cleavage; carotenoid polymer; carotenoid stability; provitamin A; vitamin A deficiency
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28703588 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b01693
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279