First-Pass Metabolism of Chlorophylls in Mice.

Mol Nutr Food Res

Food Phytochemistry Department, Instituto de la Grasa (CSIC),, 41013, Sevilla, Spain.

Published: September 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how chlorophylls are metabolized in mice, revealing that a diet rich in chlorophylls leads to specific liver metabolites.
  • The research shows that the absorption of certain chlorophyll-related compounds, like pheophorbide a, is influenced by a particular first-pass metabolism and requires specific protein interactions.
  • The findings suggest that both active absorption and liver processing of chlorophylls contribute to the accumulation of beneficial compounds, highlighting potential health impacts of dietary chlorophylls.

Article Abstract

Scope: The dietary intake of chlorophylls is estimated to be ≈50 mg d . However, their first pass metabolism and systemic assimilation is not well characterized.

Methods And Results: A group of 30 mice are fed a diet rich in chlorophylls, while 10 mice received a standard diet without chlorophylls (control group). Liver extracts are analyzed every 15 days by HPLC-ESI(+)/APCI(+)-hrTOF- MS/MS to measure the accretion of specific chlorophyll metabolites. The chlorophyll profile found in the livers of mice fed a chlorophyll-rich diet shows that the formation and/or absorption of pheophorbides, pyro-derivatives, and phytyl-chlorin e require the occurrence of a precise first-pass metabolism. In addition, the apical absorption of pheorphorbide a-rich micelles is significantly inhibited in Caucasian colon adenocarcinoma-2 cells pre-incubated with BLT1.

Conclusion: Pheophorbide a absorption is, at least partly, protein-mediated through SR-BI. This active absorption process could explain the specific accumulation of pheophorbide a in the livers of animals fed a chlorophyll-rich diet. A complementary mechanism could be the de-esterification of pheophytin a in the liver, yielding pheophorbide a and phytol, which can explain the origin of phytol in the liver. Hence, the results suggest two molecular mechanisms responsible for the accumulation of the health-promoting compounds pheophorbide and phytol.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.201800562DOI Listing

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