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Red Blood Cells and Lipoproteins: Important Reservoirs and Transporters of Polyphenols and Their Metabolites.

Salwa M HarbiRania A HussienIntesar HawasawiIbtehaj AlshdoukhiVikram ChopraAmal N AlanaziWilliam ButlerRakia KoromaColin PetersDeanne D GarverJoe A Vinson
Published in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2020)
Dietary polyphenols are protective for chronic diseases. Their blood transport has not been well investigated. This work examines multiple classes of polyphenols and their interactions with albumin, lipoproteins, and red blood cell (RBC) compartments using four models and determines the % polyphenol in each compartment studied. The RBC alone model showed a dose-response polyphenol association with RBCs. A blood model with flavanones determined the % polyphenol that was inside RBCs and bound to the surface using a new albumin washing procedure. It was shown that RBCs can methylate flavanones. The whole blood model separated the polyphenol into four compartments with the aid of affinity chromatography. More polyphenols were found with albumin and lipoproteins (high-density lipoproteins and low-density lipoproteins) than with RBCs. In the plasma model, the polyphenols associated almost equally between lipoproteins and albumin. RBCs and lipoproteins are shown to be important reservoirs and transporters of polyphenols in blood.
Keyphrases
  • red blood cell
  • high density
  • mass spectrometry
  • ms ms
  • minimally invasive
  • high resolution
  • atomic force microscopy