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Nutritional impact of elevated calcium transport activity in carrots
Author(s) -
Jay Morris,
Keli M. Hawthorne,
Tim Hotze,
Steven A. Abrams,
Kendal D. Hirschi
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
proceedings of the national academy of sciences of the united states of america
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.011
H-Index - 771
eISSN - 1091-6490
pISSN - 0027-8424
DOI - 10.1073/pnas.0709005105
Subject(s) - calcium , bioavailability , food science , chemistry , ingestion , nutrient , calcium metabolism , absorption (acoustics) , zoology , biology , biochemistry , pharmacology , physics , organic chemistry , acoustics
Nutrition recommendations worldwide emphasize ingestion of plant-based diets rather than diets that rely primarily on animal products. However, this plant-based diet could limit the intake of essential nutrients such as calcium. Osteoporosis is one of the world's most prevalent nutritional disorders, and inadequate dietary calcium is a known contributor to the pathophysiology of this condition. Previously, we have modified carrots to express increased levels of a plant calcium transporter (sCAX1), and these plants contain ≈2-fold-higher calcium content in the edible portions of the carrots. However, it was unproven whether this change would increase the total amount of bioavailable calcium. In randomized trials, we labeled these modified carrots with isotopic calcium and fed them to mice and humans to assess calcium bioavailability. In mice feeding regimes (n = 120), we measured45 Ca incorporation into bones and determined that mice required twice the serving size of control carrots to obtain the calcium found insCAX1 carrots. We used a dual-stable isotope method with42 Ca-labeled carrots and i.v.46 Ca to determine the absorption of calcium from these carrots in humans. In a cross-over study of 15 male and 15 female adults, we found that when people were fedsCAX1 and control carrots, total calcium absorption per 100 g of carrots was 41% ± 2% higher insCAX1 carrots. Both the mice and human feeding studies demonstrate increased calcium absorption fromsCAX1 -expressing carrots compared with controls. These results demonstrate an alternative means of fortifying vegetables with bioavailable calcium.

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