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Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

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Citrus Phytochemicals
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Page 1: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

CitrusPhytochemicals

Page 2: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Designer Foods

Functional Foods

Hypernutritious Foods

Nutraceuticals

Page 3: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Nutraceuticals

Nutraceuticals is a generic descriptionof food composites containing naturaland biologically active phytochemicals

with disease-preventing and life-sustaining functions alone or in

combination.

Page 4: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Chemopreventive agents

• Micronutrients–vitamins, beta carotene,

molybdenum, calcium• Phytochemicals• Synthetics

–vitamin derivatives–piroxicam–tamoxifen

Page 5: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Phytochemicals

• Carotenoids• Indole• Saponins

• Coumarins• Dietary Fiber• Isoflavones• Protease

inhibitors

Page 6: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Phytochemicals

• Organosulfides• Isothiocynates• Indoles• Dithiolthiones

• Polyphenols• Flavonoids• Tannins• Folic acid

Contd.

Page 7: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Chemopreventive agents(Based on their mechanisms of action)

• Blocking agents• Suppressing agents

Page 8: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

CANCER CHEMOPREVENTIVE AGENTS

1. BLOCKING AGENTS -- prevent carcinogens from reaching or reacting with the DNA, the genetic information.

2. SUPPRESSIVE AGENTS -- inhibit the expression of cancer in cells that have already been exposed to a carcinogen.

Page 9: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Cancer Producing Compounds

Blocking Agents

Cells Attacked By Cancer Producing Compounds

Suppressing Agents

Cancer Wattenburg, 1993

Page 10: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Chemopreventive agents

• Blocking agents– Flavonoids– Indoles– Isothiocynates– Diallyl sulfides– D-limonene

Page 11: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

MECHANISM OF ACTION (BLOCKING AGENTS)

1. Inhibit the formation of the active carcinogen.

2. Increase the rate at which the active carcinogen is inactivated.

3. Act as scavengers for the active forms of carcinogens.

Page 12: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Chemopreventive agents

• Suppressing agents–D-limonene–Diallyl sulfides– vitamin D–vitamin A and retinoids–monoterpenes–carotenoids– polyphenols

Page 13: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Anticarcingenic mechanisms

• Antioxidant effects

• Increased activity of enzymes thatdetoxify carcinogens

• Effect on cell differentiation• Blocked formation of nitrosamines• Altered estrogen metabolism• Decreased cell proliferation• Maintenance of normal DNA repair

Page 14: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

THREE-PHASE MECHANISM FOR CHEMICAL CARCINOGENESIS

1. INITIATION - normal cells to latent tumor cells.

2. PROMOTION - latent tumor cells to carcinoma in situ.

3. PROGRESSION - carcinoma in situ to invasive carcinoma.

Page 15: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Initiation

Promotion

Phase I enzymes

Oxidative damageFree radicals

Lycopene, Lutein,Zeaxanthin and Beta carotene

Procarcinogens

CarcinogensElectrophiles

DNA Damage

Phase II enzymesGlutathione S-transferase

LimonoidsFlavonoids

Tumor

Page 16: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

• Carotenoids– Lycopene -Prostate Cancer– Beta carotene– Lutein and zeaxanthin-Blindness– Beta cryptoxanthin

Health Promoting Compounds

Page 17: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Carotenoid Concentrations• Lycopene- Grapefruit

– 3362 ug/100 g wet wt (Mangels etal.,1993)

– 350 ug/100 g wet wt (Gross et al., 1987)

Page 18: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Carotenoid Concentrations(ug/100g)

Carotenoids Oranges PinkGrf

WhiteGrf

Mandarins Lemons

Beta Carotene 39 1310 14 38 3

AlphaCarotene

20 0 1 20 0

Lutein +Zeaxanthin

14 0 10 20 12

Lycopene 0 3362 0 0 0

BetaCryptoxanthin

149 0 0 106 0

Page 19: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Clinton, 1998. Nutrition Reviews 56(2):35-51.

Food Lycopene content mg/100g

Tomato (fresh) 0.88-4.20

Grapefruit (raw pink) 3.36Tomato (cooked) 3.7

Tomato (sauce) 6.2

Tomato Paste 5.40-150.00

Tomato soup, condensed 7.99Tomato Powder, drum or spray

dried112.63-126.49

Tomato Juice 5.00-11.60

Guava (fresh) 5.4Watermelon 2.3

Papaya (fresh) 2.00-5.30Ketchup 9.90-13.44

Page 20: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Lycopene Variation Among Texas Grapefruits

Star R

ubyI-4

8

Rio R

ed

Ray R

uby

Hender

son

Ruby Red

Thomso

n Pin

k

Marsh

White

Duncan W

hite0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14ppm

Page 21: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Beta carotene

Star Rubya

I-48b

Hendersonbc

Rio Redcd

Ray Rubyd

Ruby Rede

Thomsonf

Marshg

Duncang

0

2

4

6

8

10ug/g fresh wt

Page 22: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Texasa

Floridab

02468

10121416

Page 23: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Beta carotene

Lycopene

Florida

Texas

Page 24: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

LIMONOIDS WITH ANTICANCER ACTIVITY

• Limonin• Limonin 17-ß-D-glucopyranoside• Limonin carboxymethoxime• Deoxylimonin

Page 25: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

INACTIVE LIMONOIDS

• Limonol• Deoxylimonic acid• Ichangensin• 17,19-didehydrolimonoic acid• Nomilinic acid 17-ß-D-glucopyranoside

Page 26: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

LIMONOIDS WITH PARTIAL ACTIVITY

• Nomilin• Nomilin 17-ß-D-glucopyranoside• Obacunone

Page 27: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

EPIDEMILOGICAL EVIDENCE

1. oral cavity. 5. pancreas.2. larynx. 6. lung.3. esophagus. 7. colon.4. stomach. 8. rectum.

Page 28: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

LIMONOID GLUCOSIDES

1. Tasteless.2. Soluble in water.3. Human consumption (already pre- sent in citrus and citrus products in relatively high concentrations).4. Can be prepared from by-products of juice processing plants (seeds and citrus molasses).

Page 29: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Limonoid Concentrations

• Limonoid glucosides– Limonin 17-beta D-glucopyranoside

(54-180 ppm)– Oranges-320 ppm– Grapefruit -195 ppm– Lemon-90 ppm

• LG 1000

Page 30: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

• Anticarcarcinogenic activities (Lam and

Hasegawa, 1989; Lam et al., 1989, 1994;

Miller et al., 1989; Gutherie et al., 1997,

1998)

• Act as natural pest control agents (Alford et

al., 1986; Klocke and Kubo, 1987)

• Excellent chemotaxonomic markers

(Hasegawa and Ifuku, 1994)

Biological Activity of Citrus Limonoids

Page 31: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University
Page 32: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

O

O

O

O

O

O

O

O

O

O

O

O

OAc

O

O

O

O

O O

CH2OH

OHHO

OHCOOH

OO

O

OH

COOH

-Glucose

O

O

O

OAc

COOH

Limonin Nomilin

Obacunone Glucoside Noimilinic acid Glucoside

Page 33: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Cancer cells used (MTTmethod)

• The HL-60 (human leukemia cancer)• SKOV3 (human ovary cancer)• Hela (human cervical cancer cells)• BGC-823 (human stomach cancer)• Bel-7402 (human liver cancer)• MCF-7 human breast cancer cell

Page 34: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Effect of different limonoids on the percentage ofviability MCF-7 cells affected by limoniods.

Limonoid concentrations

0 20 40 60 80 100 120 140

Per

cent

age

of v

iabi

lity

of M

CF

-7 h

uman

bre

ast c

ance

r ce

lls

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

Nomilin Limonin Glucoside mixture Nomilinic acid glucosideObacunone glucoside

Page 35: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Foods with cancer preventative properties

Incr

easi

ng im

port

ance Garlic

CabbageLicorice

Soybeans GingerUmbelliferae

(carrots, celery, parsnips)

Onions Tea TurmericCitrus (orange, lemon, grapefruit)

Whole Wheat Flax Brown RiceSolanacae (tomato, eggplant, peppers)

Cruciferous (broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts)

Oats Mints Oregano CucumberRosemary Sage Potato Thyme Chives

Cantaloupe Basil Tarragon Barley Berries

Page 36: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

• Flavonoids- Breast cancer andheart diseases–Naringin–Hesperetin

Health Promoting Compounds

Page 37: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Antioxidant Activity• Reactive oxygen Species (ROS) play major role many diseases. To counteract ROS and prevent their possible damage to biological molecules all oxygen-consuming organisms have antioxidant systems.• Antioxidant enzymes: superoxide dismuatase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase.

Page 38: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Total Antioxidant capacity

• ORAC- Oxygen RadicalAbsorbance Capacity can bemeasured by COBAS FARA IIanalyzer

Page 39: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

ORAC of commercial orange juice and vitamin C from juice

Wang et al., 1996. J. Agric. Food Chem. 14(3):701-705.Juice Vit. C Juice Vit. C Juice Vit. C Juice Vit. C Juice Vit. C

0

5

10

15

20ORAC (micromoles Trolox eq./ml)

Grape Grapefruit Tomato Orange Apple

Page 40: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Antioxidant Activity of Fruits

Wang et al., 1996. J. Agric. Food Chem. 14(3):701-705.

Strawberry Plum Orange Grapefruit Grapefruit Tomato Grape Grape0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160ORAC (micromoles of Trolox equvivalents/g of dry matter)

Page 41: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Pectin• Used traditionally for jelly preparation• Modified pectin can prevent prostate cancer• Pectin can reduce levels of serum cholesterol

Page 42: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

How much we need?

• To consume about 6g of pectinonly about 170 g of grapefruitpulp is sufficient (Baker, 1994)

Page 43: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Apples 0.71-0.84Apricots 0.71-1.32Bananas 0.59-1.28Beans 0.27-1.11Blackberries 0.68-1.19Carrots 1.17-2.92Cherries 0.24-0.54Dewberries 0.51-1.00Grapes 0.09-0.28Grapefruit 3.30-4.50Lemons 2.8-2.99Loganberries 0.59Oranges 2.34-2.38Raspberries 0.97Squash 1.00-2.00

Pectin Content in Different Fruits (% fresh wt)

Baker, 1997

Page 44: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Dietary Fiber

Dietary fiberdenotes all plantcell wallcomponents thatcannot bedigested by ananimal’s ownenzymes.

• Pectin• gums• lignin• Cellulose• Hemicellulose• pentosans

Page 45: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Citrus Pectin Health Benefits• Modified Citrus Pectin (MCP) prevent

cancer metastasis, inhibiting cancer cellproliferation

• Hypoglycemic Effect• Hypocholesterolemic Effect• Hemostasis• Modulate human immune function• Detoxification

Page 46: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Steps in the process of tumor dissemination

Page 47: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Schematic representation of aggregation of tumorcell to normal cell and pectin function

Raz and LOtan, 1987

Page 48: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Probable mechanism of pectinhypocholesterol effect

Farnandez, et al., 1990

Page 49: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Pectin HypocholesterolemicAction

Page 50: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Pectin HemostasisFunction

Pectin can shorten the coagulationtime of blood and act as anantagonist of heparin when injectedintravenously.

Pectin sulfate can behave as stronganticoagulant.

Page 51: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Parts of the citrus fruit which contain pectin

Page 52: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Components of Pectin• Molecular Weight

• Polygalacturonic Acid• Galacturonic Acid Content• Methoxyl Esters• Neutral Sugar Content

• Ions• Proteins

Page 53: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Structure of Pectin

Page 54: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

•••••

•••••

•••••••

Linear galacturonan

Side ChainRhamnogalacturonan

Structure of Pectin

Page 55: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Modified Citrus Pectin

• Mol Wt should be less than 10 KD

• MC should be less than 8%

• Galactose and uronic acid may enhance

the effect

• Higher Mol Wt and higher MC increase

its hypocholesterol effect.

Pienta et al., 1995; Briggs 1997

Page 56: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Fibroblast Growth FactorSignaling System

Page 57: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Factor-Receptor

• Cell needs to communicate to eachother.

Page 58: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

• Fibroblast growth factor (FGF) isubiquitous and a mediator ofdevelopmental processes in theembryo and homeostasis.

• Inappropriate FGF signaltransduction may contribute todefect, tumor growth,cardiovascular disease, diabetes,etc.

Page 59: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Components of FGF

Page 60: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

• FGF factor, currently 19 geneproducts)

• FGF receptor, (Transmembranetyrosine kinases) currently 4 geneproducts

• Heparan sulfate proteoglycans(FGFRHS)

Page 61: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

FGFR FGF

FGFR

FGF FGFR

FGF

FGFR FGF

Stimulation

Inhibition

No StimulationNo Inhibition

Page 62: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Inhibitors (Heparin Mimics)

• Suramin• Suramin analogs

• pentosan polysulfate• Carrageenans• Dextran• Dextran derivatives

Page 63: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University
Page 64: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

FPLC Elution Profile

Page 65: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Variation of Pectin Contentand Composition inDifferent Citrus Species

Page 66: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

0.00

1.00

2.00

3.00

4.00

5.00

6.00

lem tan org gra

F/A L

Ext

ract

ion

Rat

e (%

of

fres

h w

eigh

t)

Pectin Extraction Rate in Different Citrus Species

d a b cb bba

Page 67: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Changes of Pectin Contentand Composition Due to

Harvest Season

Page 68: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

Aug Sep Nov Jan Mar May

F A L

Pectin Extraction RateE

xtra

ctio

n R

ate

(% o

f fr

esh

wei

ght)

Page 69: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

140

160

180

200

Aug Sep Nov Jan Mar May

F A L

mg/

g of

Pec

tin

Wei

ght

Variation of Pectin Sugar Content

Page 70: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

Aug Sep Nov Jan Mar May

rhamnose arabinose xylosemannose galactose glucose

Per

cent

age

(% o

f to

tal s

ugar

wt.

)

Harvest Month

Variation of pectin sugar composition

Page 71: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

In Vitro Effects ofCitrus Pectin on the

FGF SignalingSystem

Page 72: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Spec

ific

bou

nd (

% o

f co

ntro

l)

Pectin Concentration (µg/ml)

Pectin Inhibit FGF-1 Binding to FGFR1

-20

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 3 30 300

Page 73: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

0

20

40

60

80

100

120

0 0.001 0.01 0.1 1 10

Pectin Added Heparin Only

% o

f M

axim

um B

indi

ng

Heparin Concentration (µg/ml)

Pectin Inhibit FGF-1 Binding to FGFR1

Page 74: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Autoradiography of pectin inhibition activity

Page 75: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

-0.2

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

Lemon Grapefruit Tangerine Orange

Citrus Species

Flavedo/Albedo Lamella

Inhibition activities of pectin

Inhi

bitio

n A

ctiv

ity

c a a aa a bb

Page 76: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1

AUG SEP NOV JAN MAR MAY

F A L

Inhibition activities of pectinIn

hibi

tion

Act

ivity

a

a a ab

a

a a a a b ab a a b a a bc a a ab

Page 77: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Foods with cancer preventative properties

Incr

easi

ng im

port

ance Garlic

CabbageLicorice

Soybeans GingerUmbelliferae

(carrots, celery, parsnips)

Onions Tea TurmericCitrus (orange, lemon, grapefruit)

Whole Wheat Flax Brown RiceSolanacae (tomato, eggplant, peppers)

Cruciferous (broccoli, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts)

Oats Mints Oregano CucumberRosemary Sage Potato Thyme Chives

Cantaloupe Basil Tarragon Barley Berries

Page 78: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Case Control and Cohort Studiesof All Types of CancerFruit No. of studies

Inverse PositiveVegetables 55 9

Fruits 29 5

Tomatoes 35 10

Carrots 50 7

Citrus Fruit 26 6

Page 79: Citrus Phytochemicals - Texas A&M University

Phytochemicals in Fruits and Vegetables to Improve Human Health

Project Director: Bhimu PatilCollaborators:

Drs. L.M.Pike, D. R. Lineberger, W. L. McKeehan, Rosemary Walzem E. G. Miller, G. B. Cobb, K.E. Dooley, N. Turner, Lisa Appelt,

and M. Skaria, Texas A&M University SystemDr. G.D. Stoner, Ohio State University

Dr. J. W. Fahey, Johns Hopkins UniversityDr. I. G. Goldman, Univ. of Wisconison

Dr. J. Heimendinger, AMC Cancer Research CenterDr. Fred Kachik, Univ. of Maryland

Dr. M. Farooqui, University of Texas, Pan-American

College Station, Kingsville, Weslaco, Lubbock, Houston, Dallas,Stephenville,

Start date: Spring 2001 http:// Phytochemicals.tamu.edu

Dr. Gene Lester, USDA-ARS WeslacoDr. Clare Hasler, University of Illionois


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