1. Detection of Anthocyanins/Anthocyanidins in Animal Tissues
- Author
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Manicka V. Vadhanam, Jeyaprakash Jeyabalan, Inder Pal Singh, Ramesh C. Gupta, Farrukh Aqil, and Jian Cai
- Subjects
Bilberry ,Blueberry Plants ,Cyanidin ,Mice, Nude ,Mass Spectrometry ,Article ,Mice ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Animals ,Food science ,Lung ,Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid ,lung tissue ,blueberry diet ,Gastrointestinal tract ,Plant Extracts ,fungi ,food and beverages ,General Chemistry ,Isoamyl alcohol ,anthocyanins ,Bioavailability ,Anthocyanidins ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Polyphenol ,Anthocyanin ,Female ,bioavailability ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,anthocyanidins - Abstract
Dietary polyphenols may contribute to the prevention of several degenerative diseases, including cancer. Anthocyanins have been shown to possess potential anticancer activity. The aim of this study was to determine anthocyanin bioavailability in lung tissue of mice fed a blueberry diet (5% w/w) for 10 days or a bolus dose (10 mg/mouse; po) of a native mixture of bilberry anthocyanidins. All five anthocyanidins present in the blueberry were detected in the lung tissue using improved methods. The effect of various solvents on the stability of anthocyanins and their recovery from the biomatrix was analyzed. Detection of anthocyanins and their metabolites was performed by UPLC and LC-MS. Although anthocyanins were not detected, cyanidin was detected by UPLC-PDA and other anthocyanidins were detected by LC-MS, following conversion to anthocyanidins and selective extraction in isoamyl alcohol. The results show that anthocyanins can be detected in lung tissue of blueberry-fed mice and thus are bioavailable beyond the gastrointestinal tract.
- Published
- 2014