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Flavanols aglycone form

Flavanols, snch as catechins and ohgomeric proanthocyanidins, are largely unglycosylated and occur naturally as the aglycone form. Proanthocyanidins are stable in the stomach in humans in vivcf but break down in vitro at pH 2 over several hours to monomeric flavanols and unidentified compounds. Most of the ingested proanthocyanidins and catechins therefore reach the small intestine intact. [Pg.23]

Each plant tissue tends to have an obviously distinctive profile of flavonoids. The flavonoid content can reach about 0.5% in pollen, 10% in propolis, and about 6 mg/kg in honey. Havonoid aglycones appear to be present only in propolis and honey, while pollen contains flavanols in herosidic forms. The flavonoids in honey and propolis have been identified as flavanones and flavanones/flavanols (Campos et ah, 1990). The antimi-crobially active flavanone pinocembrine was foimd to be a major flavonoid in honey (Bogdanov, 1989). Amiot et ah (1989) studied two blossom and two honeydew Swiss honey samples and foimd that pinocembrine was the main flavonoid. Pinocembrine concentration varied between 2 and 3 mg/kg (Bogdanov, 1989). Berahia et ah (1993) analyzed sunflower honey samples and detected six flavone/flavols, four flavanone/ flavols, and pinocembrin, of which pinocembrin is the main flavonoid. The flavonoids in sunflower honey and propolis were characterized and assessed for their effects on hepatic drug-metabolizing enzymes and benzo [fl]pyrene-DNA adduct formation (Sabatier et ah, 1992 Siess et ah, 1996). [Pg.108]


See other pages where Flavanols aglycone form is mentioned: [Pg.1259]    [Pg.354]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.324]    [Pg.325]    [Pg.366]    [Pg.289]    [Pg.776]    [Pg.813]    [Pg.536]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.177]    [Pg.483]    [Pg.395]    [Pg.155]    [Pg.198]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.23 ]




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Aglycon

Aglycone

Aglycones

Aglycons

Flavanoles

Flavanols

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