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  • Title: Quercetin glucosides interact with the intestinal glucose transport pathway.
    Author: Gee JM, DuPont MS, Rhodes MJ, Johnson IT.
    Journal: Free Radic Biol Med; 1998 Jul 01; 25(1):19-25. PubMed ID: 9655517.
    Abstract:
    Flavonols are efficient antioxidants with the potential to protect biological macromolecules from oxidative damage in vivo, and if absorbed into the circulation they may protect against cardiovascular disease. Although flavonol aglycones are present in foods at low concentrations, their glycosides are abundant in onions, apples, beans and tea, and are thought to be stable under the conditions of the human stomach and small bowel. There is, however, recent evidence to suggest that intact glycosides of quercetin may be absorbed from the small intestine by a mechanism involving the glucose transport pathway. In the present study we tested this hypothesis by measuring the effect of quercetin glycosides on the rate of efflux of galactose from the jejunal mucosa. Everted sacs of rat jejunum preloaded with 14C-galactose were exposed to quercetin glycosides isolated from onions. Quercetin mono- and diglucosides were shown to accelerate the carrier-mediated efflux of galactose via a sodium-dependent pathway. HPLC analysis confirmed the stability of the glycosides under conditions simulating those in the upper alimentary tract. These studies suggest that purified quercetin glucosides are capable of interacting with the sodium dependent glucose transport receptors in the mucosal epithelium and may therefore be absorbed by the small intestine in vivo.
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