Manuka honey (MH) is a functional food that shows in vitro antimicrobial activity and to which wound healing properties, positive effects on oral health, and beneficial properties during the treatment of gastrointestinal infection diseases and upper gastrointestinal dyspepsia are assigned. The antibacterial activity of MH is mainly due to its high concentration of methylglyoxal (MGO), a highly bifunctional alkylating agent that can induce rapid nonenzymatic modifications of proteins. The aim of the present study was to investigate the influence of in vitro simulated gastric and gastroduodenal digestion on MGO content of MH. To this aim commercial MH samples, with different MGO concentrations, were submitted to digestion, and MGO was determined before and after digestion by a validated RP-HPLC-DAD method. Moreover, the role of MGO in causing carbonylation of the digestive proteins and influencing their enzymatic activities was investigated. The results showed that after digestion MGO concentration decreases because it reacts with digestive enzymes by carbonylating their free amino groups. Nevertheless, carbonylation of pepsin and pancreatin does not influence their physiological activity and therefore does not seem to interfere with the digestion process.

Influence of in Vitro Simulated Gastroduodenal Digestion on Methylglyoxal Concentration of Manuka ( Lectospermum scoparium ) Honey.

DAGLIA, MARIA;COLLINA, SIMONA;CURTI, VALERIA
2013-01-01

Abstract

Manuka honey (MH) is a functional food that shows in vitro antimicrobial activity and to which wound healing properties, positive effects on oral health, and beneficial properties during the treatment of gastrointestinal infection diseases and upper gastrointestinal dyspepsia are assigned. The antibacterial activity of MH is mainly due to its high concentration of methylglyoxal (MGO), a highly bifunctional alkylating agent that can induce rapid nonenzymatic modifications of proteins. The aim of the present study was to investigate the influence of in vitro simulated gastric and gastroduodenal digestion on MGO content of MH. To this aim commercial MH samples, with different MGO concentrations, were submitted to digestion, and MGO was determined before and after digestion by a validated RP-HPLC-DAD method. Moreover, the role of MGO in causing carbonylation of the digestive proteins and influencing their enzymatic activities was investigated. The results showed that after digestion MGO concentration decreases because it reacts with digestive enzymes by carbonylating their free amino groups. Nevertheless, carbonylation of pepsin and pancreatin does not influence their physiological activity and therefore does not seem to interfere with the digestion process.
2013
Chemistry & Analysis covers research on natural and laboratory syntheses, chemical structure, structure-function relationship, isolation and analyses of biologically significant molecules, medicinal and food chemistry. Technical material describing crucial chemical methods in biochemical analysis and research is also placed in this category. Resources covering general biochemistry and natural metabolic pathways are excluded.
The Food Science/Nutrition category includes resources in food science covering topics such as food additives and contaminants, food chemistry and biochemistry, food microbiology, technology, engineering, processing, quality, and safety. Also covered are meat science, dairy science, and brewing. The closely related area of nutrition is also covered in this category, including general nutrition, nutrition and metabolism, nutrition science, nutritional biochemistry, and dietetics.
Esperti anonimi
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
61
9
2140
2145
6
manuka honey, methylglyoxal, gastroduodenal enzymes, protein carbonylation, enzymatic activity
no
4
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Daglia, Maria; Ferrari, D; Collina, Simona; Curti, Valeria
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/691433
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