Some Health Benefits Of Berries May Not Make It Past Your Mouth
1/28/2013

Editor: This story was released earlier today from Ohio State University's Office of Research and Innovation Communications.
COLUMBUS,
Ohio – Research has suggested that compounds that give colorful fruits
their rich hues, especially berries, promote health and might even
prevent cancer. But for the first time, scientists have exposed extracts
from numerous berries high in those pigments to human saliva to see
just what kinds of health-promoting substances are likely to survive and
be produced in the mouth.
It’s too early to name the best berry
for health promotion based on this initial work. But the researchers
have discovered that two families of pigments that provide berries with
their colors, called anthocyanins, are more susceptible to degradation in the mouth than are the other four classes of these pigments.
The
Ohio State University study also showed that bacteria living in the
mouth are responsible for most of the breakdown of these compounds that
occurs in saliva. Researchers are investigating whether it’s the berry
pigments themselves, or instead the products of their degradation, that
actually promote health.
Scientists say that these early findings
will contribute to the further development of confectionaries, gums and
other delivery devices for the prevention and possibly the treatment of
conditions such as periodontal disease and oral cancers.
The
researchers exposed extracts of anthocyanin pigments from blueberries,
chokeberries, black raspberries, red grapes and strawberries to the
saliva collected from 14 people. Black raspberries, in particular, have
been shown in numerous previous studies to have chemopreventive effects
on tumors in the mouth, esophagus and colon, mostly in animal studies.
Their high anthocyanin content has been linked to those benefits.
“All fruits are unique because their chemical composition, or fingerprint, varies,” said Mark Failla, professor of human nutrition at Ohio State, researcher with Ohio State's Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center (OARDC), and interim chair of the Department of Human Sciences.
“There are many different edible berries. Some might be better for
providing health-promoting effects within the oral cavity, whereas
others may be more beneficial for colonic health. We simply do not know
at this time.
“Increased intake of fruits and vegetables is
associated with decreased risk of some chronic diseases. An
understanding of the metabolism of these compounds, and the relative
activities of the compounds in the consumed fruit and their metabolic
products, is needed to make scientifically sound dietary recommendations
and to develop effective delivery vehicles for the mouth,” Failla said.
The research is published in a recent issue of the journal Food Chemistry.
Failla
and colleagues asked 14 healthy individuals between the ages of 21 and
55 years to collect saliva in the morning before they had eaten
breakfast or brushed their teeth. Research participants later collected
additional saliva samples before and after they had rinsed their mouths
with an antibacterial liquid.
The five fruits selected for study
allowed the scientists to test the six distinct families of the
anthocyanin pigments. Researchers purified the anthocyanins from each
berry type and added the extracts to saliva.
The extent of the
pigment degradation in saliva was primarily a function of the chemical
structure of a given anthocyanin, said Failla, also an investigator in
Ohio State’s Comprehensive Cancer Center and Food Innovation Center.
Two
families of anthocyanins consistently degraded when exposed to saliva:
delphinidin and petunidin. Four other families were more stable:
cyanidin, pelargonidin, peonidin and malvidin.
“Our observations
suggest that the bacteria within one’s oral cavity are a primary
mediator of pigment metabolism. The bacteria are converting compounds
that are present in the foods into metabolites,” Failla said. “One area
of great interest is whether the health-promoting benefits associated
with eating anthocyanin-rich fruits like berries are provided by the
pigment itself, the natural combinations of the pigments in the fruit,
or the metabolites produced by bacteria in the mouth and other regions
of the gastrointestinal tract.”
There is context for this study
that further complicates the understanding of anthocyanins’ benefits.
Multiple studies have led to the conclusion that anthocyanins themselves
are very poorly absorbed by the body.
“If anthocyanins are the
actual health-promoting compound, you would want to design food
products, confectionaries and gels containing mixtures of anthocyanins
that are stable in the mouth. If, on the other hand, the metabolites
produced by the metabolism of anthocyanins are the actual
health-promoting compounds, there will be greater interest in fruits
that contain anthocyanins that are less stable in the oral cavity,”
Failla said. “We lack such insights at this time.”
The extent to
which the anthocyanins were degraded varied among the 14 people whose
saliva was used in the study. However, two families of anthocyanins
consistently degraded the most in all volunteers. Failla said the
observed variation among individuals is likely related to differences in
the microbial community that resides in each person’s mouth.
This
research group is continuing the work, examining which bacteria are
most involved in the metabolism of anthocyanins and testing the
stability of the pigments in berry juices in the mouths of human
volunteers rather than in test tubes containing their saliva.
This
work was supported in part by OARDC, the research arm of Ohio State's
College of Food, Agricultural, and Environmental Sciences.
Co-authors include Kom Kamonpatana of the Interdisciplinary Ph.D. Program in Nutrition; Monica Giusti and Ken Riedl of the Department of Food Science and Technology; Chureeporn Chitchumroonchokchai of the Department of Human Nutrition; and Maria MorenoCruz and Purnima Kumar of the Department of Periodontology, all at Ohio State. All but MorenoCruz are also investigators in the Food Innovation Center.
NOTE TO REPORTERS: For enhanced coverage, please visit: http://researchnews.osu.edu/archive/saliva.htm
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Writers
Emily Caldwell 614-292-8310 Caldwell.151@osu.edu
Sources
Mark Failla 614-247-2412 Failla.3@osu.edu
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