ABSTRACT:Human subjects drank coffee containing 412 mol of chlorogenic acids, and plasma and urine were collected 0 to 24 h after ingestion and were analyzed by high-performance liquid chromatographymass spectrometry. Within 1 h, some of the components in the coffee reached nanomole peak plasma concentrations (C max ), whereas chlorogenic acid metabolites, including caffeic acid
Green tea containing 634 micromol of flavan-3-ols was ingested by human subjects with an ileostomy. Ileal fluid, plasma, and urine collected 0-24 h after ingestion were analysed by HPLC-MS. The ileal fluid contained 70% of the ingested flavan-3-ols in the form of parent compounds (33%) and 23 metabolites (37%). The main metabolites effluxed back into the lumen of the small intestine were O-linked sulphates and methyl-sulphates of (epi)catechin and (epi)gallocatechin. Thus, in subjects with a functioning colon substantial quantities of flavan-3-ols would pass from the small to the large intestine. Plasma contained 16 metabolites, principally methylated, sulphated, and glucuronidated conjugates of (epi)catechin and (epi)gallocatechin, exhibiting 101-256 nM peak plasma concentration and the time to reach peak plasma concentration ranging from 0.8 to 2.2 h. Plasma pharmacokinetic profiles were similar to those obtained with healthy subjects, indicating that flavan-3-ol absorption occurs in the small intestine. Ileostomists had earlier plasma time to reach peak plasma concentration values than subjects with an intact colon, indicating the absence of an ileal brake. Urine contained 18 metabolites of (epi)catechin and (epi)gallocatechin in amounts corresponding to 6.8+/-0.6% of total flavan-3-ol intake. However, excretion of (epi)catechin metabolites was equivalent to 27% of the ingested (-)-epicatechin and (+)-catechin.
Previous studies on coffee examined absorption of phenolic acids (PA) in the small intestine, but not the contribution of the colon to absorption. Nine healthy volunteers ingested instant soluble coffee ( approximately 335 mg total chlorogenic acids (CGAs)) in water. Blood samples were taken over 12 h, and at 24 h to assess return to baseline. Many previous studies, which used glucuronidase and sulfatase, measured only PA and did not rigorously assess CGAs. To improve this, plasma samples were analyzed after full hydrolysis by chlorogenate esterase, glucuronidase and sulfatase to release aglycone equivalents of PA followed by liquid-liquid extraction and ESI-LC-ESI-MS/MS detection. Ferulic, caffeic and isoferulic acid equivalents appeared rapidly in plasma, peaking at 1-2 h. Dihydrocaffeic and dihydroferulic acids appeared in plasma 6-8 h after ingestion (T(max=)8-12 h). Substantial variability in maximum plasma concentration and T(max) was also observed between individuals. This study confirms that the small intestine is a significant site for absorption of PA, but shows for the first time that the colon/microflora play the major role in absorption and metabolism of CGAs and PA from coffee.
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