Modelling of nutrient bioaccessibility in almond seeds based on the fracture properties of their cell walls

The cell walls (dietary fibre) of edible plants, which consist of mainly non-starch polysaccharides, play an important role in regulating nutrient bioaccessibility (release) during digestion in the upper gastrointestinal tract. Recent studies have shown that structurally-intact cell walls hinder lip...

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Veröffentlicht in:Food & function 2014-12, Vol.5 (12), p.3096-3106
Hauptverfasser: Grassby, Terri, Picout, David R, Mandalari, Giuseppina, Faulks, Richard M, Kendall, Cyril W C, Rich, Gillian T, Wickham, Martin S J, Lapsley, Karen, Ellis, Peter R
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container_end_page 3106
container_issue 12
container_start_page 3096
container_title Food & function
container_volume 5
creator Grassby, Terri
Picout, David R
Mandalari, Giuseppina
Faulks, Richard M
Kendall, Cyril W C
Rich, Gillian T
Wickham, Martin S J
Lapsley, Karen
Ellis, Peter R
description The cell walls (dietary fibre) of edible plants, which consist of mainly non-starch polysaccharides, play an important role in regulating nutrient bioaccessibility (release) during digestion in the upper gastrointestinal tract. Recent studies have shown that structurally-intact cell walls hinder lipid release from the parenchyma cells of almond seeds. A theoretical model was developed to predict the bioaccessibility of lipid using simple geometry and data on cell dimensions and particle size for calculating the number of ruptured cells in cut almond cubes. Cubes (2 mm) and finely-ground flour of low and high lipid bioaccessibility, respectively, were prepared from almond cotyledons. The model predictions were compared with data from in vitro gastric and duodenal digestion of almond cubes and flour. The model showed that lipid bioaccessibility is highly dependent on particle size and cell diameter. Only a modified version of the model (the Extended Theoretical Model, ETM), in which the cells at the edges and corners were counted once only, was acceptable for the full range of particle sizes. Lipid release values predicted from the ETM were 5.7% for almond cubes and 42% for almond flour. In vitro digestion of cubes and flour showed that lipid released from ruptured cells was available for hydrolysis and resulted in lipid losses of 9.9 and 39.3%, respectively. The ETM shows considerable potential for predicting lipid release in the upper gastrointestinal tract. Further work is warranted to evaluate the efficacy of this model to accurately predict nutrient bioaccessibility in a broad range of edible plants.
doi_str_mv 10.1039/c4fo00659c
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source MEDLINE; Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Cell Wall - chemistry
Cell Wall - metabolism
Digestion
Flour - analysis
Humans
Lipid Metabolism
Lipids - chemistry
Models, Biological
Polysaccharides
Prunus - chemistry
Prunus - metabolism
Prunus dulcis
Seeds - chemistry
Seeds - metabolism
title Modelling of nutrient bioaccessibility in almond seeds based on the fracture properties of their cell walls
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