Effect of Calcium, Tannic Acid, Phytic Acid and Pectin over Iron Uptake in an In Vitro Caco-2 Cell Model
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2014Metadata
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Andrews, Mónica
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Effect of Calcium, Tannic Acid, Phytic Acid and Pectin over Iron Uptake in an In Vitro Caco-2 Cell Model
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Abstract
Calcium, phytic acid, polyphenols and fiber are
major inhibitors of iron absorption and they could be found
in excess in some diets, thereby altering or modifying the iron
nutrition status. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the
effect of calcium, tannic acid, phytic acid, and pectin over iron
uptake, using an in vitro model of epithelial cells (Caco-2 cell
line). Caco-2 cells were incubated with iron (10–30 μM) with
or without CaCl2 (500 and 1,000 μM) for 24 h. Then, cells
were challenged with phytic acid (50–150 μM); pectin (50–
150 nM) or tannic acid (100–500 μM) for another 24 h.
Finally, 55Fe (10 μM) uptake was determined. Iron
dialyzability was studied using an in vitro digestion method.
Iron uptake in cells pre-incubated with 20 and 30 μM Fe was
inhibited by CaCl2 (500 μM). Iron uptake decreased in cells
cultured with tannic acid (300 μM) and CaCl2 (500–
1,000 μM) (two-way ANOVA, p=0.002). Phytic acid also
decreased iron uptake mainly when cells were treated with
CaCl2 (1,000 μM) (two-way ANOVA; p<0.05). Pectin slightly
decreased iron uptake (p=NS). Iron dialyzability decreased
when iron was mixed with CaCl2 and phytic or tannic acid
(T test p<0.0001, for both) but not when mixed with pectin.
Phytic acid combined with calcium is a strong iron uptake
inhibitor. Pectin slightly decreased iron uptake with or without
calcium. Tannic acid showed an unexpected behavior, inducing
an increase on iron uptake, despite its low Fe dialyzability.
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Artículo de publicación ISI
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URI: https://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/124137
DOI: DOI: 10.1007/s12011-014-9911-0
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Biol Trace Elem Res (2014) 158:122–127
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