4.7 Review

A Review of the Health Benefits of Food Enriched with Kynurenic Acid

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu14194182

Keywords

food; food analysis; food ingredients; infant formula; kynurenic acid; nutrition

Funding

  1. Medical University of Lublin, Poland [DS 394, DS 448]

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Kynurenic acid (KYNA), an endogenous substance produced from tryptophan, can be synthesized by gut microbiome and delivered through food. It is readily absorbed and excreted mainly in urine. While it does not penetrate the brain, recent studies have shown the potential peripheral effects of KYNA. Enriching food with KYNA may have health-promoting effects.
Kynurenic acid (KYNA), a metabolite of tryptophan, is an endogenous substance produced intracellularly by various human cells. In addition, KYNA can be synthesized by the gut microbiome and delivered in food. However, its content in food is very low and the total alimentary supply with food accounts for only 1-3% of daily KYNA excretion. The only known exception is chestnut honey, which has a higher KYNA content than other foods by at least two orders of magnitude. KYNA is readily absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract; it is not metabolized and is excreted mainly in urine. It possesses well-defined molecular targets, which allows the study and elucidation of KYNA's role in various pathological conditions. Following a period of fascination with KYNA's importance for the central nervous system, research into its role in the peripheral system has been expanding rapidly in recent years, bringing some exciting discoveries. KYNA does not penetrate from the peripheral circulation into the brain; hence, the following review summarizes knowledge on the peripheral consequences of KYNA administration, presents data on KYNA content in food products, in the context of its daily supply in diets, and systematizes the available pharmacokinetic data. Finally, it provides an analysis of the rationale behind enriching foods with KYNA for health-promoting effects.

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