1. The small intestinal mucosa acts as a rutin reservoir to extend flavonoid anti-inflammatory activity in experimental ileitis and colitis
- Author
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Abdelali Daddaoua, Antonio Zarzuelo, Rocío López-Posadas, María Dolores Suárez, Fermín Sánchez de Medina, Isabel Romero-Calvo, Olga Martínez-Augustin, Cristina Mascaraque, E. Martinez-Plata, Raquel González, Mercedes González, Jose J.G. Marin, and Maria J. Monte
- Subjects
medicine.drug_class ,Rutin ,Flavonoid ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Pharmacology ,Inflammatory bowel disease ,Anti-inflammatory ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,medicine ,TX341-641 ,heterocyclic compounds ,Ileitis ,Colitis ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Mass spectrometry ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,medicine.disease ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Quercetin ,Tumor necrosis factor alpha ,Food Science - Abstract
Flavonoids are considered versatile components in many functional foods with multiple health benefits. One of the most abundant flavonoids, rutin, is effective in experimental colitis, which is attributed to colonic intraluminal release of its flavonol quercetin. Surprisingly, however, quercetin is ineffective. We aimed to explore whether rutin/quercetin protect against trinitrobenzenesulphonic acid (TNBS) experimental ileitis. TNBS colitis was also studied for reference. Rutin was active in ileitis and in colitis, while quercetin showed only marginal effects. In order to explain this discrepancy we measured flavonoid mucosal levels and found that anti-inflammatory activity correlated with the presence of rutin in the ileal mucosa rather than with colonic mucosal levels of rutin or quercetin. In fact, rutin was protective against colitis even when administered intraperitoneally. Our results indicate that rutin is taken up by the ileal mucosa and slowly released to the lumen, resulting in extended exposure of the mucosa to quercetin.
- Published
- 2015
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