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Co‐products of beef processing enhance non‐haem iron absorption in an in vitro digestion/caco‐2 cell model
Author(s) -
O'Flaherty Elisabeth A. A.,
Tsermoula Paraskevi,
O'Neill Eileen E.,
O'Brien Nora M.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
international journal of food science and technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.831
H-Index - 96
eISSN - 1365-2621
pISSN - 0950-5423
DOI - 10.1111/ijfs.14049
Subject(s) - bioavailability , caco 2 , food science , ferritin , chemistry , in vitro , digestion (alchemy) , absorption (acoustics) , intracellular , biochemistry , biology , chromatography , pharmacology , physics , acoustics
Summary Beef processing produces high volumes of protein rich, low value, ‘waste’ co‐products such as offal. Beef improves uptake of low bioavailable non‐haem iron (found in vegetables, fortificants, supplements) and this effect is dubbed the ‘meat‐factor’, although the underlying mechanism is not fully understood. Here, we investigate whether bovine co‐products (kidney, lung, heart) not previously studied share this enhancing potential. This was determined by coupled in vitro digestion of co‐products and subsequent caco‐2 cell ferritin formation (an intracellular iron storage protein). In this study we show that bovine co‐products significantly increase caco‐2 cells’ response to non‐haem iron from infant rice cereal. The presence of these co‐products, (kidney, lung and heart), increased relative uptake (by 207.13%, 171.21%, 265.28%, respectively), to a greater extent than beef (30.23%). Our findings present a novel function for co‐products of beef processing that may have potential as food ingredients to improve non‐haem iron bioavailability, thus adding value.

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