4.7 Article

Assessment of Bioactive Compounds under Simulated Gastrointestinal Digestion of Bee Pollen and Bee Bread: Bioaccessibility and Antioxidant Activity

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10050651

Keywords

bee pollen; bee bread; bioactive compounds; in vitro digestion; bioaccessibility; antioxidant activity

Funding

  1. Foundation for Science and Technology (FCT, Portugal) [UIDB/00690/2020]
  2. Programa Apicola Nacional 2020-2022 (National Beekeeping Program) [PDR2020-1.0.1-FEADER-031734]
  3. FCT-Foundation for Science and Technology

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Bee pollen and bee bread are excellent natural resources with rich nutrients and bioactive compounds for health improvement. However, their antioxidant capacity decreases after gastrointestinal digestion, with bee bread showing higher bioaccessibility of bioactive content than bee pollen.
Bee pollen and bee bread have always been regarded as excellent natural resources for application in food and pharmaceutical fields due to their rich nutrient content and diversity of bioactive compounds with health-improving properties. Extensive studies on both bee products as ingredients for a healthy diet were reported, although the data concerning their metabolization on the gastrointestinal tract is quite limited. Here, we report, at each digestive stage, the bioactive profile for both bee products, their bioaccessibility levels and the antioxidant activity evaluation. The findings indicated that the average bioaccessibility level of total phenolic and total flavonoid content for bee pollen was 31% and 25%, respectively, while it was 38% and 35% for bee bread. This was reflected in a decrease of their antioxidant capacity at the end of in vitro gastrointestinal digestion, both in free radicals scavenging capacity and in reducing power. Moreover, within the 35 phytochemicals identified, the most affected by gastrointestinal digestion were phenylamides, with a complete digestibility at the end of the intestinal phase. Overall, our results highlight that bioactive compounds in both raw products do not reflect the real amount absorbed in the intestine, being bee bread more accessible in bioactive content than bee pollen.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available