| Literature DB >> 31261930 |
Jed W Fahey1,2,3,4, Kristina L Wade5,6, Katherine K Stephenson5,6, Anita A Panjwani5,7, Hua Liu5,6, Grace Cornblatt8, Brian S Cornblatt8, Stacy L Ownby8, Edward Fuchs9, Walter David Holtzclaw5,6, Lawrence J Cheskin10.
Abstract
We examined whether gastric acidity would affect the activity of myrosinase, co-delivered with glucoraphanin (GR), to convert GR to sulforaphane (SF). A broccoli seed and sprout extract (BSE) rich in GR and active myrosinase was delivered before and after participants began taking the anti-acid omeprazole, a potent proton pump inhibitor. Gastric acidity appears to attenuate GR bioavailability, as evidenced by more SF and its metabolites being excreted after participants started taking omeprazole. Enteric coating enhanced conversion of GR to SF, perhaps by sparing myrosinase from the acidity of the stomach. There were negligible effects of age, sex, ethnicity, BMI, vegetable consumption, and bowel movement frequency and quality. Greater body mass correlated with reduced conversion efficiency. Changes in the expression of 20 genes in peripheral blood mononuclear cells were evaluated as possible pharmacodynamic indicators. When grouped by their primary functions based on a priori knowledge, expression of genes associated with inflammation decreased non-significantly, and those genes associated with cytoprotection, detoxification and antioxidant functions increased significantly with bioavailability. Using principal components analysis, component loadings of the changes in gene expression confirmed these groupings in a sensitivity analysis.Entities:
Keywords: chemoprevention; crucifer; nutritional supplement; pharmacodynamics; pharmacokinetics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31261930 PMCID: PMC6682992 DOI: 10.3390/nu11071489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Design of PPI Phase clinical intervention.
PPI Phase conversion efficiency (SF bioavailability) normalized on a molar basis to the dose received. Numbers in red italics were censored from any further treatment of the data (and are not included in column- or row-averages in this table), due to apparent incomplete urine collection or extraordinarily low output as further described in Section 2.7.
| No PPI | PPI | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uncoated | Coated | Uncoated | Coated | Overall Means | |||||||||||
| Subject # | 8 h | 16 h | 24 h (Sum) | 8 h | 16 h | 24 h (Sum) | 8 h | 16 h | 24 h (Sum) | 8 h | 16 h | 24 h (Sum) | 8 h | 16 h | 24 h |
| 1 | 18.71% | 5.49% | 24.20% | 10.99% | 4.66% | 15.65% | 10.99% | 5.21% | 16.20% | 25.35% | 30.43% | 55.78% | 16.51% | 11.45% | 27.96% |
| 2 | 15.08% | 5.14% | 20.22% | 0.44% | 32.51% | 32.95% | 32.61% | 5.81% | 38.42% | 0.27% | 20.59% | 20.86% | 12.10% | 16.01% | 28.11% |
| 3 | 28.88% | 8.67% | 37.55% | 10.98% | 28.79% | 39.77% | 45.89% | 7.28% | 53.17% | 16.48% | 18.27% | 34.75% | 25.56% | 15.75% | 41.31% |
| 4 | 4.18% | 2.17% | 6.35% |
|
|
| 31.79% | 8.68% | 40.47% | 9.74% | 4.51% | 14.25% | 15.24% | 5.12% | 20.36% |
| 5 | 0.74% | 10.73% | 11.47% | 2.84% | 32.41% | 35.25% | 35.84% | 8.10% | 43.94% |
|
|
| 13.14% | 17.08% | 30.22% |
| 6 | 17.33% | 11.88% | 29.21% | 31.56% | 5.15% | 36.71% | 35.75% | 6.87% | 42.62% | 39.55% | 11.00% | 50.55% | 31.05% | 8.73% | 39.77% |
| 7 | 15.75% | 3.49% | 19.24% | 33.13% | 8.83% | 41.96% | 31.54% | 5.91% | 37.45% | 32.18% | 15.59% | 47.77% | 28.15% | 8.46% | 36.61% |
| 8 | 30.14% | 2.54% | 32.68% | 16.49% | 24.39% | 40.88% | 17.87% | 3.22% | 21.09% |
|
|
| 21.50% | 10.05% | 31.55% |
| 9 | 31.71% | 7.57% | 39.28% | 20.08% | 6.16% | 26.24% | 23.28% | 4.24% | 27.52% | 9.58% | 13.65% | 23.23% | 21.16% | 7.91% | 29.07% |
| 10 | 18.96% | 5.23% | 24.19% | 34.79% | 5.65% | 40.44% | 28.01% | 5.61% | 33.62% | 27.49% | 12.83% | 40.32% | 27.31% | 7.33% | 34.64% |
| 11 | 16.35% | 9.21% | 25.56% | 9.63% | 12.41% | 22.04% | 34.77% | 7.99% | 42.76% | 19.95% | 12.75% | 32.70% | 20.18% | 10.59% | 30.77% |
| 12 | 18.32% | 5.24% | 23.56% | 23.53% | 11.26% | 34.79% |
|
|
|
|
|
| 20.93% | 8.25% | 29.18% |
| 13 | 25.63% | 6.41% | 32.04% | 4.35% | 6.34% | 10.69% | 26.51% | 4.99% | 31.50% | 2.42% | 15.65% | 18.07% | 14.73% | 8.35% | 23.08% |
| 14 | 17.18% | 5.62% | 22.80% | 35.86% | 5.28% | 41.14% | 26.92% | 5.29% | 32.21% | 26.71% | 13.74% | 40.45% | 26.67% | 7.48% | 34.15% |
| 15 | 26.52% | 12.37% | 38.89% | 38.53% | 17.93% | 56.46% | 22.31% | 12.61% | 34.92% | 29.02% | 29.02% | 29.12% | 17.98% | 39.82% | |
| 16 | 16.07% | 7.33% | 23.40% | 44.52% | 12.71% | 57.23% | 5.14% | 2.75% | 7.89% | 27.06% | 18.73% | 45.79% | 23.20% | 10.38% | 33.58% |
| Mean --> | 18.85% | 6.82% | 25.67% | 21.18% | 14.30% | 35.48% | 27.28% | 6.30% | 33.59% | 19.73% | 16.67% | 36.41% | |||
| Mean --> | 30.57% | 35.00% | |||||||||||||
| Mean --> | 32.79% | ||||||||||||||
Figure 2(A) Bioavailability following a single oral dose of a broccoli seed and sprout extract (BSE) containing GR and active myrosinase, as a function of treatment. There was a significant difference by paired t-test between uncoated and coated administration, prior to omeprazole administration (p < 0.0207), and a significant increase in bioavailability from uncoated tablets given after- compared to before- PPI administration (p < 0.0440). Error bars represent the 5th and 95th percentile of the confidence interval around the mean, and boxes bracket the middle 50% of the distribution range. (B) Excretion of SF metabolites following a single oral dose of BSE containing GR and active myrosinase, in urine collected over 1st 8 h post-dose (0–8 h) and the following 16 h (8–24 h). Paired t-tests for differences between 1st 8 h and next 16 h were highly significant for treatments in which tablets were uncoated (p < 0.0001), but not significant for treatments in which tablets were enteric-coated (p = 0.0594). Tablet coating significantly delayed conversion both prior to omeprazole treatment (p < 0.0013) and following omeprazole treatment (p < 0.0001). Error bars represent S.E.M.
Figure 3Excretion of SF metabolites following a single oral BSE dose containing GR and active myrosinase. (A) Relationship between sex of participant and bioavailability (NSD). (B) Relationship between body weight and bioavailability. Shaded region represents 95% C.I. around fitted line (F1,74 = 5.83, p < 0.018).
Adverse events reported (PPI Phase).
| Treatment | Dose | Constipation | Loose BM | Abdominal Pain | Bloating | Excess Gas |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No PPI | uncoated | 1 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 4 |
| No PPI | coated | 0 | 8 | 11 | 4 | 4 |
| + PPI | Uncoated a | 0 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 4 |
| + PPI | coated | 1 | 9 | 10 b,c | 4 | 5 |
a One subject had a cold/fever, reported concurrent with dose 3. b One subject vomited following dose 4. This was relieved with sodium bicarbonate. c One subject reported abdominal pain ~2 h post dose 4 so bad that he was “lying on the bathroom floor.” Pain was ranked a 7 on a 1–10 scale and lasted about 1.5 h.
Figure 4Principal component analysis (PCA) loadings and sulforaphane bioavailability (means following single pre- and post-omeprazole delivery of an oral BSE dose containing GR and active myrosinase). PC1(▲), PC2 (●), PC3(■).