4.7 Article

Low bioaccessibility of vitamin D2 from yeast-fortified bread compared to crystalline D2 bread and D3 from fluid milks

Journal

FOOD & FUNCTION
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages 4589-4596

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c6fo00935b

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The assessment of the efficacy of dietary and supplemental vitamin D tends to be confounded by differences in the serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D response between vitamin D-2 and vitamin D-3. Serum response differences from these vitamers may be due to differences in bioavailability. To address this specifically, the bioaccessibility was assessed for vitamin D-2 from breads fortified with UV-treated yeast, and a benchmark against staple vitamin D-3 fortified foods including bovine milks and infant formula, as well as crystalline vitamin D-2 fortified bread. Fortified foods were subjected to a three-stage static in vitro digestion model, and vitamin D was analyzed by HPLC-MS. Vitamin D bioaccessibility was significantly greater from bovine milks and infant formula (71-85%) than from yeast-fortified sandwich breads (6-7%). Bioaccessibility was not different between whole wheat and white wheat bread (p > 0.05), but was similar to 4x lower from yeast-fortified bread than from crystalline vitamin D-2 fortified bread (p < 0.05). Intact yeast cells were observed in the digesta of yeast fortified bread. These results indicate that the low bioavailability of yeast D2 in comparison to other vitamin D2 sources is likely due to entrapment within a less digestible yeast matrix and not only to metabolic differences between vitamins D-2 and D-3.

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