Consumption of Roasted Coffee Leads to Conjugated Metabolites of Atractyligenin in Human Plasma

被引:1
|
作者
Lang, Roman [1 ]
Czech, Coline [1 ]
Haas, Melanie [2 ]
Skurk, Thomas [2 ]
机构
[1] Tech Univ Munich, Leibniz Inst Food Syst Biol, D-85354 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
[2] Tech Univ Munich, ZIEL Inst Food & Hlth, Core Facil Human Studies, D-85354 Freising Weihenstephan, Germany
关键词
roasted coffee; atractyligenin; metabolites; quantitative analysis; human intervention; plasma; GLYCOSIDES;
D O I
10.1021/acs.jafc.3c05252
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
Roasted coffee contains atractyligenin-2-O-beta-d-glucoside and 3 '-O-beta-d-glucosyl-2 '-O-isovaleryl-2-O-beta-d-glucosylatractyligenin, which are ingested with the brew. Known metabolites are atractyligenin, atractyligenin-19-O-beta-d-glucuronide (M1), 2 beta-hydroxy-15-oxoatractylan-4 alpha-carboxy-19-O-beta-d-glucuronide (M2), and 2 beta-hydroxy-15-oxoatractylan-4 alpha-carboxylic acid-2-O-beta-d-glucuronide (M3), but the appearance and pharmacokinetic properties are unknown. Therefore, first time-resolved quantitative data of atractyligenin glycosides and their metabolites in plasma samples from a pilot human intervention study (n = 10) were acquired. None of the compounds were found in the control samples and before coffee consumption (t = 0 h). After coffee, neither of the atractyligenin glycosides appeared in the plasma, but the aglycone atractyligenin and the conjugated metabolite M1 reached an estimated c(max) of 41.9 +/- 12.5 and 25.1 +/- 4.9 nM, respectively, after 1 h. M2 and M3 were not quantifiable until their concentration enormously increased >= 4 h after coffee consumption, reaching an estimated c(max) of 2.5 +/- 1.9 and 55.0 +/- 57.7 nM at t = 10 h. The data suggest that metabolites of atractyligenin could be exploited to indicate coffee consumption.
引用
收藏
页码:19516 / 19522
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Consumption of Roasted Coffee Leads to Conjugated Metabolites of Atractyligenin in Human Plasma
    Lang, Roman
    Czech, Coline
    Haas, Melanie
    Skurk, Thomas
    Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 2023, 71 (49): : 19516 - 19522
  • [2] Pharmacokinetics of primary atractyligenin metabolites after coffee consumption
    Lang, Roman
    Haas, Melanie
    Danzer, Barbara
    Somoza, Veronika
    Skurk, Thomas
    JOURNAL OF NUTRITIONAL BIOCHEMISTRY, 2025, 139
  • [3] ATRACTYLIGENIN - ESSENTIAL COMPONENT OF ROASTED COFFEE BEANS
    LUDWIG, H
    OBERMANN, H
    SPITELLER, G
    CHEMISCHE BERICHTE-RECUEIL, 1974, 107 (07): : 2409 - 2411
  • [4] Metabolites of dietary atractyligenin glucoside in coffee drinkers' urine
    Lang, Roman
    Beusch, Anja
    Dirndorfer, Sebastian
    FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2023, 405
  • [5] Free and conjugated biogenic amines in green and roasted coffee beans
    Casal, S
    Mendes, E
    Alves, MR
    Alves, RC
    Beatriz, M
    Oliveira, PP
    Ferreira, MA
    JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY, 2004, 52 (20) : 6188 - 6192
  • [6] Plasma Metabolites Associated with Coffee Consumption: A Metabolomic Approach within the PREDIMED Study
    Papandreou, Christopher
    Hernandez-Alonso, Pablo
    Bullo, Monica
    Ruiz-Canela, Miguel
    Yu, Edward
    Guasch-Ferre, Marta
    Toledo, Estefania
    Dennis, Courtney
    Deik, Amy
    Clish, Clary
    Razquin, Cristina
    Corella, Dolores
    Estruch, Ramon
    Ros, Emilio
    Fito, Montserrat
    Aros, Fernando
    Fiol, Miquel
    Lapetra, Jose
    Ruano, Cristina
    Liang, Liming
    Martinez-Gonzalez, Miguel A.
    Hu, Frank B.
    Salas-Salvado, Jordi
    NUTRIENTS, 2019, 11 (05):
  • [7] Coffee, Black Tea, and Green Tea Consumption in Relation to Plasma Metabolites in an Asian Population
    Seow, Wei Jie
    Low, Dorrain Yanwen
    Pan, Wen-Chi
    Gunther, Samuel H.
    Sim, Xueling
    Torta, Federico
    Herr, Deron R.
    Kovalik, Jean-Paul
    Ching, Jianhong
    Khoo, Chin Meng
    Wenk, Markus R.
    Tai, E. Shyong
    van Dam, Rob M.
    MOLECULAR NUTRITION & FOOD RESEARCH, 2020, 64 (24)
  • [8] Pharmacokinetics of caffeine and its metabolites in plasma and urine after consuming a soluble green/roasted coffee blend by healthy subjects
    Martinez-Lopez, Sara
    Sarria, Beatriz
    Baeza, Gema
    Mateos, Raquel
    Bravo-Clemente, Laura
    FOOD RESEARCH INTERNATIONAL, 2014, 64 : 125 - 133
  • [9] Dicinnamoylquinides in roasted coffee inhibit the human adenosine transporter
    de Paulis, T
    Schmidt, DE
    Bruchey, AK
    Kirby, MT
    McDonald, MP
    Commers, P
    Lovinger, DM
    Martin, PR
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY, 2002, 442 (03) : 215 - 223
  • [10] Radiation dose to Malaysian populace via the consumption of roasted ground and instant coffee
    Khandaker, Mayeen Uddin
    Zainuddin, Nur Khairunnisa
    Bradley, D. A.
    Faruque, M. R., I
    Almasoud, F., I
    Sayyed, M., I
    Sulieman, A.
    Jojo, P. J.
    RADIATION PHYSICS AND CHEMISTRY, 2020, 173