Article in Journal

Microbial catabolism of coffee pulp (poly)phenols during in vitro colonic fermentation

Cañas, S., Tosi, N., Núñez-Gómez, V., Del Rio, D., Mena, P., Martín-Cabrejas, M.A., et al.

Food chemistry, 2025, 463 (3), 141354

Licence: CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
OPEN ACCESS

January 14, 2025


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Coffee pulp is a by-product characterized by its richness in phenolic compounds. This study examined the catabolism of (poly)phenols in digested coffee pulp flour (CPF) and extract (CPE) during in vitro colonic fermentation. After a simulated gastrointestinal digestion, samples were fermented using human microbiota and (poly)phenol transformations were analyzed by UHPLC-ESI-MS/MS. Digested CPF and CPE contained high amounts of phenolic acids, notably 3′,4′-dihydroxycinnamic (99.7–240.1 μmol 100 g−1) and 3,4-dihydroxybenzoic acid (174.1–491.4 μmol 100 g−1). During the in vitro fecal fermentation, phenylpropanoic acids (1.5- to 2.6-fold), phenyl-γ-valerolactones (1.3- to 23-fold), phenylvaleric acids (1.1- to 2-fold) and benzene derivatives (1.5-fold) increased; while benzoic and cinnamic acids, cinnamoylquinic derivatives, flavonols, benzaldehydes and diphenylpropan-2-ols decreased. The (poly)phenols in CPF were catabolized more slowly than in CPE, suggesting protection of the fibrous matrix against phenolic degradation. Coffee pulp may be a promising food ingredient rich in (poly)phenols contributing to the prevention of intestinal diseases.

This research output is related to

Spoke 04

Food quality and nutrition

To push towards sustainable and tailored food and nutrition

Lead organisationUniMi

Spoke leaderPatrizia Riso
Research projectOBI-WAN-DIET

A multi-omics approach to tackle obesity at individual level with plant-based diets


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Principal investigators

Pedro Mena,Daniele Del Rio

Referred to

Spoke 04