4.7 Article

Compartmental and noncompartmental modeling of 13C-lycopene absorption, isomerization, and distribution kinetics in healthy adults

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 102, Issue 6, Pages 1436-1449

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.114.103143

Keywords

compartmental modeling; isomers; kinetics; lycopene; tracers

Funding

  1. NIH National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine [5R21AT005166]
  2. James Cancer Hospital's Bionutrition and Chemoprevention Fund [310684]
  3. Ohio State University Center for Clinical and Translational Science (from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences) [UL1TR001070]
  4. Ohio State University Comprehensive Cancer Center and its Nutrient and Phytochemical Analytic Shared Resource [P30CA016058]
  5. Pelotonia postdoctoral fellowship

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Background: Lycopene, which is a red carotenoid in tomatoes, has been hypothesized to mediate disease-preventive effects associated with tomato consumption. Lycopene is consumed primarily as the all-trans geometric isomer in foods, whereas human plasma and tissues show greater proportions of cis isomers. Objective: With the use of compartmental modeling and stable isotope technology, we determined whether endogenous all-trans-to-cis-lycopene isomerization or isomeric-bioavailability differences underlie the greater proportion of lycopene cis isomers in human tissues than in tomato foods. Design: Healthy men (n = 4) and women (n = 4) consumed C-13-lycopene (10.2 mg; 82% all-trans and 18% cis), and plasma was collected over 28 d. Unlabeled and C-13-labeled total lycopene and lycopene-isomer plasma concentrations, which were measured with the use of high-performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, were fit to a 7-compartment model. Results: Subjects absorbed a mean 6 SEM of 23% +/- 6% of the lycopene. The proportion of plasma cis-C-13-lycopene isomers increased over time, and all-trans had a shorter half-life than that of cis isomers (5.3 +/- 0.3 and 8.8 +/- 0.6 d, respectively; P < 0.001) and an earlier time to reach maximal plasma concentration than that of cis isomers (28 +/- 7 and 48 +/- 9 h, respectively). A compartmental model that allowed for interindividual differences in cis- and all-trans-lycopene bioavailability and endogenous trans-to-cis-lycopene isomerization was predictive of plasma C-13 and unlabeled cis- and all-trans-lycopene concentrations. Although the bioavailability of cis (24.5% +/- 6%) and all-trans (23.2% +/- 8%) isomers did not differ, endogenous isomerization (0.97 +/- 0.25 mu mol/d in the fast-turnover tissue lycopene pool) drove tissue and plasma isomeric profiles. Conclusion: C-13-Lycopene combined with physiologic compartmental modeling provides a strategy for following complex in vivo metabolic processes in humans and reveals that postabsorptive trans-to-cis-lycopene isomerization, and not the differential bioavailability of isomers, drives tissue and plasma enrichment of cis-lycopene.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available