Changes in the content and bioavailability of onion quercetin and grape resveratrol during in vitro human digestion

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Abstract

We investigated the effects of in vitro human digestion on the content and bioavailability of onion quercetin and grape resveratrol caused by the composition of saliva or gastric, duodenal, or bile juice. We observed the digestibility of extracted onion quercetin and grape resveratrol, respectively, in the small intestine of the in vitro human digestion system. By liquid chromatography-mass spectroscopy, we found that the degradation of quercetin and resveratrol was influenced by small intestine digestion. Before and after in vitro human digestion, the 2, 2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) radical scavenging activities of homogenized water- and ethanol-extracted grapes were higher than those of onion extracts. DPPH radical scavenging activity in both quercetin and resveratrol was decreased by in vitro digestion. These results will improve our understanding of how human digestion influences the contents and free radical scavenging activities of quercetin and resveratrol.

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Lee, S. Y., Lee, S. J., Yim, D. G., & Hur, S. J. (2020). Changes in the content and bioavailability of onion quercetin and grape resveratrol during in vitro human digestion. Foods, 9(6). https://doi.org/10.3390/foods9060694

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