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American Chemical Society, Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 7(64), p. 1600-1609, 2016

DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b05915

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Reducing Compounds Equivocally Influence Oxidation during Digestion of a High-Fat Beef Product, which Promotes Cytotoxicity in Colorectal Carcinoma Cell Lines

This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Abstract

We studied the formation of malondialdehyde, 4-hydroxy-nonenal and hexanal (lipid oxidation products, LOP) during in vitro digestion of a cooked low-fat and high-fat beef product in response to the addition of reducing compounds. We also investigated whether higher LOP in the digests resulted in a higher cyto- and genotoxicity in Caco-2, HT-29 and HCT-116 cell lines. High-fat compared to low-fat beef digests contained approximately 10-fold higher LOP concentrations (all P<0.001), and induced higher cytotoxicity (P<0.001). During digestion of the high-fat product, phenolic acids (gallic, ferulic, chlorogenic and caffeic acid) displayed either pro-oxidant or antioxidant behavior at lower and higher doses respectively, whereas ascorbic acid was pro-oxidant at all doses, and the lipophilic reducing compounds (α-tocopherol, quercetin and silibinin) all exerted a clear antioxidant effect. During digestion of the low-fat product, the hydrophilic compounds and quercetin were antioxidant. Decreases or increases in LOP concentrations amounted to 100% change versus controls.