Evaluation of Different Advanced Approaches to Simulation of Dynamic In Vitro Digestion of Polyphenols from Different Food Matrices—A Systematic Review
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Duque Soto, Carmen María; Quintriqueo Cid, Alejandra; Rueda Robles, Ascensión; Borras Linares, María Isabel; Lozano Sánchez, JesúsEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Dynamic in vitro digestion Phenolic compounds SHIME TIM SIMGI
Date
2022-12-31Referencia bibliográfica
Duque-Soto, C... [et al.]. Evaluation of Different Advanced Approaches to Simulation of Dynamic In Vitro Digestion of Polyphenols from Different Food Matrices—A Systematic Review. Antioxidants 2023, 12, 101. [https://doi.org/10.3390/antiox12010101]
Sponsorship
Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation EQC2019-006060-P and TED2021-132489A-I00; Torres Quevedo Postdoctoral grant (PTQ2021- 012110); Regional Government of Andalucía (predoctoral grant PREDOC_00110); Chilean National Research Agency (Agencia Nacional de Investigación ANID) 1221038Abstract
Phenolic compounds have become interesting bioactive antioxidant compounds with
implications for obesity, cancer and inflammatory gastrointestinal pathologies. As the influence
of digestion and gut microbiota on antioxidant behavior is yet to be completely elucidated, and
due to limitations associated to in vivo studies, dynamic in vitro gastrointestinal models have been
promoted. A systematic review was conducted of different databases (PubMed, Web of Science
and Scopus) following PRISMA guidelines to assess different dynamic digestion models and assay
protocols used for phenolic compound research regarding bioaccesibility and interaction with colonic
microbiota. Of 284 records identified, those including dynamic multicompartmental digestion models
for the study of phenolic compound bioaccesibility, bioactivity and the effects of microbiota were
included, with 57 studies meeting the inclusion criteria. Different conditions and experimental
configurations as well as administered doses, sample treatments and microbiological assays of
dynamic digestion studies on polyphenols were recorded and compared to establish their relevance
for the dynamic in vitro digestion of phenolic compounds. While similarities were observed in
certain experimental areas, a high variability was found in others, such as administered doses. A
description of considerations on the study of the digestion of phenolic compounds is proposed to
enhance comparability in research.