Gastrointestinal digestion of yerba mate, rosemary and green tea extracts and their subsequent colonic fermentation by human, pig or rat inocula

Food Res Int. 2024 Oct:194:114918. doi: 10.1016/j.foodres.2024.114918. Epub 2024 Aug 11.

Abstract

Polyphenolic compounds are common constituents of human and animal diets and undergo extensive metabolism by the gut microbiota before entering circulation. In order to compare the transformations of polyphenols from yerba mate, rosemary, and green tea extracts in the gastrointestinal tract, simulated gastrointestinal digestion coupled with colonic fermentation were used. For enhancing the comparative character of the investigation, colonic fermentation was performed with human, pig and rat intestinal microbiota. Chemical analysis was performed using a HPLC system coupled to a diode-array detector and mass spectrometer. Gastrointestinal digestion diminished the total amount of phenolics in the rosemary and green tea extracts by 27.5 and 59.2 %, respectively. These reductions occurred mainly at the expense of the major constituents of these extracts, namely rosmarinic acid (-45.7 %) and epigalocatechin gallate (-60.6 %). The yerba mate extract was practically not affected in terms of total phenolics, but several conversions and isomerizations occurred (e.g., 30 % of trans-3-O-caffeoylquinic acid was converted into the cis form). The polyphenolics of the yerba mate extract were also the least decomposed by the microbiota of all three species, especially in the case of the human one (-10.8 %). In contrast, the human microbiota transformed the polyphenolics of the rosemary and green extracts by 95.9 and 88.2 %, respectively. The yerba mate-extract had its contents in cis 3-O-caffeoylquinic acid diminished by 78 % by the human microbiota relative to the gastrointestinal digestion, but the content of 5-O-caffeoylquinic acid (also a chlorogenic acid), was increased by 22.2 %. The latter phenomenon did not occur with the rat and pig microbiota. The pronounced interspecies differences indicate the need for considerable caution when translating the results of experiments on the effects of polyphenolics performed in rats, or even pigs, to humans.

Keywords: Colonic fermentation; Gastrointestinal digestion; Green tea; Gut-liver axis stimulation; Microbiota; Polyphenolics; Rosemary; Yerba mate.

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Camellia sinensis / chemistry
  • Catechin / analogs & derivatives
  • Catechin / analysis
  • Catechin / metabolism
  • Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid
  • Cinnamates / analysis
  • Cinnamates / metabolism
  • Colon* / metabolism
  • Colon* / microbiology
  • Depsides* / analysis
  • Depsides* / metabolism
  • Digestion*
  • Fermentation*
  • Gastrointestinal Microbiome
  • Humans
  • Ilex paraguariensis* / chemistry
  • Male
  • Plant Extracts* / metabolism
  • Polyphenols* / analysis
  • Polyphenols* / metabolism
  • Quinic Acid / analogs & derivatives
  • Quinic Acid / analysis
  • Quinic Acid / metabolism
  • Rats
  • Rosmarinic Acid*
  • Rosmarinus* / chemistry
  • Swine
  • Tea / chemistry

Substances

  • Plant Extracts
  • Depsides
  • Polyphenols
  • Rosmarinic Acid
  • Cinnamates
  • Tea
  • Quinic Acid
  • Catechin
  • caffeoylquinic acid
  • epigallocatechin gallate