| Literature DB >> 31037938 |
Lifeng Li1,2, Hong Yao3, Xiaojun Li1, Quanwei Zhang1, Xiyang Wu3, Tinlong Wong1, Hongming Zheng1, Hauyee Fung1, Bingxun Yang4, Diklung Ma5, Chunghang Leung6, Ge Zhang1, Zhaoxiang Bian1, Aiping Lu1, Quanbin Han1,2.
Abstract
Polysaccharides from functional foods have been proved to have diverse bioactivities, but little is known about what exactly happens to these polysaccharides after oral administration and even less about the underlying mechanism of action. Taking the marker polysaccharide (DOP) of Dendrobium officinale as an example, this study aims to demonstrate the dynamic distribution and degradation of orally dosed DOP in mice and in vitro using near-infrared fluorescence imaging and a kind of chromatographic analysis. The results indicate that (1) neither DOP nor fluorescence-labeled DOP (FDOP) was absorbed, (2) both DOP and FDOP were undigested and were quickly degraded to short-chain fatty acids in the large intestine, (3) DOP modulated gut microbiota, which could be associated with DOP's suppression of 4T1 tumor growth in mice. All of these findings suggest that some (maybe not all) bioactive polysaccharides share a common destiny: indigestible and nonabsorbing, ends in modulating bioactivities-associated gut microbiota.Entities:
Keywords: absorption; antitumor; digestion; gut microbiota; polysaccharide
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31037938 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.9b01489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Agric Food Chem ISSN: 0021-8561 Impact factor: 5.279