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Analysis of citrus bioflavonoid content and dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibitory potential of commercially available supplements

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-21, 17:15 authored by Gupta, A, Al-Aubaidy, HA, Christian NarkowiczChristian Narkowicz, Jelinek, HF, David NicholsDavid Nichols, John BurgessJohn Burgess, Glenn JacobsonGlenn Jacobson
Citrus bioflavonoids are polyphenolic plant-derived pigments found in high levels in oranges, lemons, grapefruits and other citrus fruits. The three most abundant types of citrus bioflavonoids are hesperidin, naringenin and eriocitrin. Citrus bioflavonoids have long been known to possess powerful free radical-scavenging properties and cardioprotective effects. The study involved the analysis of 10 commercially available citrus bioflavonoid supplements from three different countries: Australia, the United States and Canada. The supplements were tested for their citrus bioflavonoid content which varied from 0.8 to 33.3% w/w. The daily bioflavonoid dose varied from 19 mg to 560 mg. Hesperidin was the major citrus bioflavonoid in nine out of ten supplements. One supplement was found to contain less than 10% of the quantity of rutin claimed to have been added. The DPP-4 inhibitory potential, compared through an estimation of rutin equivalence, ranged from 1.9 mg to 400 mg per day. This data highlights the variability between the supplements in their potential to inhibit DPP-4 for subsequent health benefits.

History

Publication title

Molecules

Volume

27

Issue

15

Article number

4741

Number

4741

Pagination

1-8

ISSN

1420-3049

Department/School

Tasmanian School of Medicine

Publisher

Molecular Diversity Preservation International

Place of publication

Matthaeusstrasse 11, Basel, Switzerland, Ch-4057

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Efficacy of medications; Preventive medicine

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