Literature DB >> 9026524

Carotenoids in biological emulsions: solubility, surface-to-core distribution, and release from lipid droplets.

P Borel1, P Grolier, M Armand, A Partier, H Lafont, D Lairon, V Azais-Braesco.   

Abstract

Data on the physico-chemical properties of carotenoids in biological emulsions are essential to our knowledge of carotenoid metabolism. Therefore, we determined the behavior of carotenoids in phospholipid-stabilized triglyceride emulsions, a model for biological emulsions such as dietary emulsions, triglyceride-rich lipoproteins, and intracellular storage droplets. The solubility of beta-carotene (a model for apolar carotenoids, carotenes) in pure bulk triglycerides (0.112 to 0.141 wt % according to triglycerides) was significantly higher than zeaxanthin (a model for polar carotenoids, xanthophylls) (0.022 to 0.088 wt %). The solubility of both carotenoids increased when the chain-length of the triglycerides' fatty acids decreased. The amount of zeaxanthin associated with lipid droplet dramatically increased in phospholipid-triglyceride droplets as compared to the pure corresponding triglyceride droplets, whereas the amount of beta-carotene associated with lipid droplets increased only slightly beta-Carotene distributed almost exclusively in the core of triolein-lecithin-carotenoid droplets, while zeaxanthin distributed preferentially at the droplet's surface. A significant percentage (8.3%) of zeaxanthin was spontaneously transferred from lipid droplets to aqueous phase and the remaining part was transferred during triglyceride hydrolysis catalysed by pancreatic lipase, while beta-carotene absolutely required triglyceride lipolysis to be transferred to the aqueous phase. Our results show that polar and apolar carotenoids behave differently in biological emulsions. They further our understanding of the bioavailability of polar and apolar carotenoids and of their distribution between lipoprotein particles.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 9026524

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Lipid Res        ISSN: 0022-2275            Impact factor:   5.922


  38 in total

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