AI Article Synopsis

  • A variety of juices (water, green pepper, pineapple, tomato, strawberry, carrot, and celery) were analyzed for their ascorbic acid content, which was standardized at 46 mg/100 ml.
  • In a controlled study with 16 men, the ability of these juices to inhibit the formation of harmful N-nitrosoamino acids (NAA) was tested over 18 days, following a diet low in nitrate and ascorbic acid.
  • Results showed that green pepper, pineapple, tomato, strawberry, and carrot juices significantly reduced the formation of specific NAA compounds compared to a positive control and ascorbic acid alone, indicating their greater protective potential against nitrosation.

Article Abstract

Water, green pepper, pineapple, tomato, strawberry, carrot, and celery juices were made 46 mg/100 ml in ascorbic acid by the addition of distilled water or ascorbate. The ability of each juice to inhibit endogenous formation of N-nitrosoamino acids (NAA) in humans was determined in controlled experiments. Sixteen men consumed a standard diet low in nitrate and ascorbic acid for 18 consecutive days. Nitrate (5.24 mmol) and L-proline (4.35 mmol) were given orally on days 3, 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17 and 18. On days 3 and 18, L-proline was immediately followed by 100 ml distilled water (positive control). On days 5, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15 and 17, L-proline was immediately followed by 100 ml juice or 46 mg ascorbate in 100 ml distilled water (treatment). Only diet was given in between dosing days to ensure baseline levels of NAA excretion. Urine was collected for 24 h following treatments and analyzed for NAA. Green pepper, pineapple, tomato, strawberry and carrot treatments significantly inhibited N-nitrosoproline (NPRO) formation relative to the positive control. Also, green pepper, pineapple and tomato juices significantly inhibited NPRO formation relative to ascorbic acid alone. Green pepper significantly inhibited N-nitrosothiazolidine-carboxylic acid formation relative to ascorbic acid alone. These data demonstrate that green pepper, tomato, pineapple, strawberry and carrot juice have greater ability to inhibit endogenous nitrosation than would be expected based solely on their ascorbate content.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/carcin/13.12.2277DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

green pepper
20
ascorbic acid
16
pepper pineapple
12
pineapple tomato
12
strawberry carrot
12
distilled water
12
formation relative
12
endogenous formation
8
tomato strawberry
8
inhibit endogenous
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!