Sébastien
Marze
UR1268 Biopolymères Interactions Assemblages, INRA, F-44300 Nantes, France. E-mail: sebastien.marze@nantes.inra.fr
First published on 29th September 2014
Despite the considerable number of in vivo and in vitro studies on the digestive fate of lipophilic nutrients, micronutrients, and bioactives, the effects of the structure and composition of foods on the physicochemical mechanisms of luminal digestion are still poorly understood. Studying them is indeed complex because the number of parameters is high and many of them are interdependent. To solve this problem, an in silico simulation based on a multi-agent system was recently proposed to study the intestinal bioaccessibility of lipophilic nutrients and micronutrients from a single oil droplet. The roles of lipolysis and solubilization in bile salt were included. The effects of several food and digestion parameters were in line with those reported in the experimental literature. The goal of the research reported in this new article was to include more digestion parameters in the simulation in order to make it more realistic against complex cases. This was done in one specific digestion condition reflecting in vitro experiments, using droplets of tricaprylin or triolein containing vitamin A. The structure and principles of the original model were kept, with independent local modifications in order to study each factor separately. First, a gastric step was added where lipolysis took place, and only a marginal effect on the following intestinal step was found. Then, the chemical form of vitamin A, either non-hydrolyzed retinyl ester or retinyl ester instantly hydrolyzed into retinol, was investigated by considering different localizations in the droplet, resulting in a higher bioaccessibility for the retinol. The case of a mixture of tricaprylin and triolein indicated an influence of the oil phase viscosity. The consideration of mixed micelles compared to simple bile salt micelles was also investigated, and resulted in a higher vitamin A bioaccessibility, especially with triolein. Finally, a full model including the most influential parameters was tested to simulate the digestion of triglyceride–limonene mixtures, giving bioaccessibility trends in very good agreement with the literature.
For lipophilic bioactives such as carotenoids, this is only the first step as it was repeatedly shown that their bioaccessibility (and subsequently their absorption) increases in the presence of lipids.2,4 In this situation, they indeed transfer from their native structures to lipid droplets, where they are efficiently co-digested with lipids to incorporate mixed micelles.5,6 There are also many foods and processed foods in which they are originally present in lipid droplets.
Thus, in most cases, studying the bioaccessibility of lipophilic bioactives consists in understanding the chemical and physical transformations during the luminal digestion of the oil phase, usually in an emulsified state (dispersed oil droplets).7 Nevertheless, this is not a trivial task as it involves many interdependent parameters related to molecular and supramolecular physicochemical properties. Typically, lipid bioaccessibility is influenced by the type and concentration of triglyceride, emulsifier (lipid, protein) and lipophilic bioactive, by the concentration (relative to their substrates) of enzymes and bile salts, and by the size of the droplets. Many sub-parameters derive from these and this makes in vitro experimental studies difficult.
To gain knowledge of the important parameters and to guide experimental work, an in silico simulation of the digestion of a single triglyceride droplet containing a lipophilic vitamin was previously designed based on a 2D multi-agent system.4 Although it was compared to other types of simulations of lipid drug delivery and digestion, it was the first time such a type of simulation was explored to obtain bioaccessibility kinetics (whereas it is more often used in biology8). The results were in very good qualitative agreement with the in vitro and in vivo experimental literature.
In this study, the objective was to increase the simulation capability against complex cases by taking more digestion parameters into account, with the longer term goal to validate the simulations using isolated droplets experiment.9 A specific digestion condition reflecting in vitro experiments was selected to create independent local modifications of the original model in order to investigate several cases separately. Parameters related to the gastric step, the chemical form of vitamin A, the formation of mixed micelles, and the use of a mixture of triglycerides or triglyceride–limonene mixtures were tested. The results are compared to those of the experimental literature.
The original simulation4 was used without any modification as the control experiment. The following conditions were used for all simulations: (a) a droplet size of 100 patches, (b) a lipophilic micronutrient content of 0.2% relative to the oil phase mass, (c) saturated bile conditions representing static in vitro protocols, where bile salt micelles get saturated with solubilizates, (d) a digestive particles/(fatty acid + monoglyceride particles) mass ratio of 2. One digestive particle represented a complex of a bile salt micelle and a pancreatic lipase. The lipophilic micronutrient was vitamin A, and the triglyceride was tricaprylin (TC) or triolein (TO). The simulation ended when all digestion products were solubilized in bile salt micelles (excess ratio) or when all bile salt micelles were saturated (limiting ratio).
The cases below were treated separately by making independent local modifications to the original model.
Molecules | Intestinal lipolysis rate4 | Gastric lipolysis rate10,11 | Solubilization ratio4 | Mixed micelles solubilization enhancement ratio15,16 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Caprylic lipids | 2* | 0.559 ± 0.066 (+ref. 13) | Monocaprylin 3.5* | 1 |
Oleic lipids | 1* | 0.155 ± 0.001 (+refs. 12,14) | Monoolein 0.5* | 1 |
Vitamin A or lipophilic drugs | Vitamin A 0.005* | Drugs 4.2 ± 1.7 (CA–MC) | ||
16.6 ± 3.0 (OA–MO) |
In the original simulation,4 vitamin A particles were free to diffuse in the whole oil phase throughout the digestion, thus representing a retinyl ester which is not hydrolyzed. In the alternative simulation, vitamin A particles were randomly positioned in the whole oil phase initially, but after their first contact with the oil–water interface, they were constrained to diffuse only at the interface, thus representing a retinyl ester which is instantly hydrolyzed into retinol.
The viscosities of TC and TO at 37 °C were taken from the literature, and the relative diffusion coefficients of all molecules in the oil phase were scaled using the Stokes–Einstein equation with the calculated viscosity of the mixture.21
However, the solubilization enhancement ratios are not known for the lipophilic micronutrients, so they were extrapolated from those in ref. 15 and 16 for the most lipophilic drugs at fatty acids + monoglycerides concentrations between 0.4 and 2.2%. These ratios in the presence of caprylic or oleic fatty acids and monoglycerides are indicated in Table 1.
In the simulation, bile salt micelles had normal solubilization ratios initially, which were multiplied by the solubilization enhancement ratios once they were saturated with fatty acids and monoglycerides.
NetLogo 4.1.3, an agent-based modeling software using the Logo programming language,26 was used to build and run the simulations. It was installed on a HP Compaq Elite 8300 PC (processor working at 3.40 GHz, RAM of 4 GB).
All simulations were run in five replicates and the results are given as averages and standard deviations. ANOVA plus hypothesis testing at 95% confidence level were performed to compare the results.
Fatty acids | TC + vitamin A | TO + vitamin A | |
---|---|---|---|
Control | Bioaccess. | 100.0 ± 0.0 | 93.5 ± 0.4 |
Half life | 68 ± 4 | 334 ± 19 | |
After gastric step | Bioaccess. | 100.0 ± 0.0 | 93.4 ± 0.6 |
Half life | 31 ± 3 (0.46) | 343 ± 18 | |
Vitamin A at the interface (retinol) | Bioaccess. | 100.0 ± 0.0 | 86.7 ± 1.4 (0.93) |
Half life | 68 ± 6 | 331 ± 28 | |
50/50 TC–TO mixture | Bioaccess. | 100.0 ± 0.0 | 100.0 ± 0.0 (1.07) |
Half life | 169 ± 17 (2.49) | 214 ± 16 (0.64) | |
Mixed micelles | Bioaccess. | 100.0 ± 0.0 | 93.7 ± 0.5 |
Half life | 65 ± 5 | 343 ± 18 | |
Mixed micelles diffusion coeff./9 | Bioaccess. | 100.0 ± 0.0 | 94.7 ± 0.5 |
Half life | 118 ± 10 (1.82) | 471 ± 18 (1.37) |
Vitamin A | TC + vitamin A | TO + vitamin A | |
---|---|---|---|
Control | Bioaccess. | 12.4 ± 1.7 | 23.2 ± 1.9 |
Half life | 148 ± 9 | 635 ± 66 | |
After gastric step | Bioaccess. | 10.9 ± 1.5 | 24.7 ± 3.2 |
Half life | 116 ± 19 (0.78) | 551 ± 56 | |
Vitamin A at the interface (retinol) | Bioaccess. | 40.4 ± 5.5 (3.26) | 57.5 ± 6.3 (2.48) |
Half life | 146 ± 4 | 536 ± 65 | |
50/50 TC–TO mixture | Bioaccess. | 27.7 ± 2.6 (2.23) | 27.7 ± 2.6 |
Half life | 474 ± 17 (3.20) | 474 ± 17 (0.75) | |
Mixed micelles | Bioaccess. | 15.9 ± 1.2 | 72.5 ± 5.8 (3.13) |
Half life | 158 ± 13 | 848 ± 64 (1.34) | |
Mixed micelles diffusion coeff./9 | Bioaccess. | 41.8 ± 7.9 (2.63) | 90.9 ± 6.8 (1.25) |
Half life | 271 ± 33 (1.72) | 724 ± 39 (0.85) |
Concerning fatty acids, whatever the digestion case was, the final FA bioaccessibility was not significantly different from the control or only marginally (for triolein, relative to the control, a ratio of 0.93 for vitamin A at the interface, and a ratio of 1.07 for the 50/50 TC–TO mixture). In contrast, FA half life was significantly different from the control in more cases. All values for tricaprylin were significantly different from those for triolein, except the final FA bioaccessibility for the 50/50 TC–TO mixture.
Concerning vitamin A, more cases gave values that were significantly different from the control, with higher values for the final bioaccessibility. All values for vitamin A with tricaprylin were significantly lower than those with triolein.
As an illustration, the case with the preceding gastric step is reported in Fig. 1–3. Fig. 1 displays the initial and the final simulation states of the gastric step for triolein and vitamin A. It shows that the diglycerides and fatty acids produced during the gastric digestion remain localized near the oil–water interface. Fig. 2 reports the full kinetics of fatty acid production during the gastric step and solubilization during the intestinal step, compared to solubilization during an intestinal step alone (control). This evidences the faster digestion kinetics of tricaprylin compared to that of triolein during both steps, with a high initial solubilization of tricaprylin digestion products in the beginning of the intestinal step. Fig. 3 reports the full kinetics of vitamin A bioaccessibility under the same conditions. It shows that this bioaccessibility is marginally affected by the gastric digestion, being significantly higher throughout the digestion only with tricaprylin (as for FA bioaccessibility).
Fig. 3 Bioaccessibility of vitamin A with tricaprylin (TC) or triolein (TO) for the same representative simulations as those presented in Fig. 2. The intestinal step is compared to the control where no gastric step preceded. On the right-hand side is a close-up of the beginning of the intestinal step. See the legend for colors. |
The results for the cases of triglyceride–limonene mixtures are summarized in Fig. 4 and 5. Because limonene is not digestible, a droplet structure was infinitely maintained in its presence, so FA and vitamin A always had the time to reach 100% bioaccessibility, whatever the limonene content was. The FA and vitamin A bioaccessibilities were thus taken at a given time, where the maximal FA bioaccessibility was reached for the control (100% for TC and 94.7% for TO in the mixed micelles case with reduced diffusion coefficients and no limonene). With a given triglyceride, this allowed a direct comparison of the bioaccessibility for the same digestion duration. Similarly, the relevant characteristic time was not the half life in these cases, but the time needed to reach the final bioaccessibility of the control. Overall, trends are seen for both FA and vitamin A, indicating lower bioaccessibilities and slower kinetics with increasing limonene content in the mixtures, more significantly with tricaprylin than with triolein.
Fig. 5 Time needed to reach the final vitamin A bioaccessibility of the control (the mixed micelles case with reduced diffusion coefficients and no limonene), with tricaprylin (empty symbol) or triolein (full symbol) in mixtures with limonene. The same comments as in Fig. 4. |
Only a few studies reported the in vitro bioaccessibility of vitamin A in emulsions.27–30 In the first study,27 vitamin A bioaccessibility ranged from 3.9 to 84.7% depending on the type of emulsion. Overall, there was a high variability between various food products with an average and a standard deviation of 35.5 ± 33.2%. In the second study by the same researchers,28 vitamin A bioaccessibility for mayonnaise was 15.0%, and the average and standard deviation for all food products were 23.3 ± 13.1%. In another study,29 vitamin A bioaccessibility for fortified milks could be estimated between 50 and 70% by calculation. In the most recent study,30 vitamin A bioaccessibility for various infant formulas and a margarine was 76.8 ± 14.5%. The simulated vitamin A bioaccessibilities for the controls are lower than that for comparable emulsions (range 50–90%),27,29,30 indicating an unrealistic modeling. In the following, the results of the different simulation cases are thus discussed in terms of estimation improvement.
Then, only the intestinal step with the tricaprylin was affected by the gastric step, inducing a faster digestion. The literature shows that a threshold production of fatty acids during the gastric digestion is needed to induce an acceleration of the intestinal digestion through a reduction of the lag time, but the value of this threshold is not precisely known depending on the oil.11,32 This acceleration is seen with tricaprylin in Fig. 2 but not with triolein, probably because the threshold was not reached. The curves in Fig. 2 with triglycerides nevertheless display very similar kinetics to the ones obtained using real oil or fat, much faster during the intestinal step than during the gastric step.32–34
Concerning vitamin A bioaccessibility, the kinetics was also affected by the gastric step only in the case of tricaprylin. This is in qualitative agreement with the results of Lee et al.35 showing that the bioavailability of a lipophilic drug (cinnarizine) depends on the mode of administration, either orally (thus passing through stomach) or directly into the duodenum in rats. The bioavailability of the lipophilic drug was always faster and higher when administered orally, and this effect was more pronounced in the case of caprylic–capric triglyceride compared to soybean oil.
The fact that the final bioaccessibilities were not affected by the gastric step in the simulation could be due to the hypothesis that vitamin A has the same solubility in each glyceride class.4 Indeed, if the solubility was considered higher in diglyceride and fatty acid compared to triglyceride, then vitamin A would be closer to the oil–water interface at the end of the gastric step (see Fig. 1), which would likely increase its bioaccessibility.
More research is needed to understand this aspect. The role of proteolysis could also be studied, as proteins are frequently used to cover the oil–water interface. It was indeed shown in vitro that intestinal digestion lipolysis depends on the presence of hydrolyzed β-lactoglobulin for a single oil droplet,36 or on the presence of pepsin for emulsions stabilized by bovine serum albumin.37 In both cases the results indicated that the produced peptides likely inhibited lipolysis,36,37 as when no protease was present, lipolysis was similar in the absence or in the presence of β-lactoglobulin.38
Only a few studies compared the two vitamin A forms. The results of Week and Sevigne39–42 for retinol and retinyl esters showed that retinol absorption was always more efficient than that of retinyl esters in chicks and humans, but not systematically in rats. Later, another study in rats confirmed that there was only a minor difference between the lymphatic recovery of retinol or retinyl palmitate from micellar infusates. However, a difference was clearly demonstrated in favor of retinyl palmitate when emulsions were infused.43
The final vitamin A bioaccessibility found in the case of retinol is now closer to the values reported in vitro.27,29,30 The ester form being the major one naturally present in foods, this agreement could indicate that the retinyl esters are quickly hydrolyzed into retinol, thus behaving as retinol. This was indeed the case in one in vitro study,29 where retinyl esters were entirely hydrolyzed within 1 hour. Also, in an in vivo study,43 when a lipase inhibitor was used together with retinyl palmitate, the lymphatic recovery was systematically much lower, confirming that retinol must be produced for optimal absorption.
More research is needed to evaluate whether retinyl esters hydrolysis could be a limiting step to absorption, as is suggested by the results of the current simulation. As only a few studies exist, the kinetics of hydrolysis should be investigated further and included in the simulation to make it more realistic.
These results apparently disagree with the literature,11,44 where mixtures of MCT and LCT displayed an intermediate FA bioaccessibility compared to MCT or LCT alone. This is because the simulation results were reported for the final FA bioaccessibility whereas it is often reported at given digestion times in the literature. When the FA bioaccessibility kinetics are compared (Fig. 6), the values for the mixture are clearly intermediate compared to each triglyceride alone, as actually reflected in the half life values. The same applies to vitamin A bioaccessibility (Fig. 6), in agreement with results for β-carotene bioaccessibility from nanoemulsions in the “low-fat” case (results in the “high-fat” case depending more on mixed micelles formation),44 and in qualitative agreement with results for the bioavailability of a lipophilic drug (halofantrine) in beagle dogs.45
This result was even more pronounced (and now significant for both triglycerides) when using reduced diffusion coefficients for all lipids, because most half lives were then increased, reflecting slower kinetics, with more time for vitamin A to solubilize. Moreover, as lipids diffusion was slower, they spent more time near the oil–water interface once they approached it, accelerating their solubilization. The additional enhancement due to the reduced diffusion coefficients was especially pronounced with tricaprylin, because much more time was available for solubilization. As only the diffusion coefficients were changed, this simulation shows that diffusion kinetics controls digestion, as lipids must first diffuse to the oil–water interface before lipolysis can occur. It was indeed beneficial to reduce the diffusion coefficient of all lipids, in agreement with the tricaprylin–triolein mixture simulation at long times, where the final bioaccessibility of vitamin A was greatly increased compared to tricaprylin alone (the tricaprylin–triolein mixture being more viscous, the diffusion coefficients related to tricaprylin were lower).
These results are difficult to compare with the literature because no experimental work studied the same systems in the context of mixed micelles solubilization. Nevertheless, the final vitamin A bioaccessibilities are now in the range reported in vitro (50–90%),27,29,30 and also in vivo (60–90%).46 So it shows that the simulation in this case is more realistic. It still needs to be refined to incorporate the real time, and experimental work using isolated droplets generated by microfluidics is currently in progress to solve this point and produce data for the same systems and digestion conditions.
The choice of the solubilization enhancement ratios was also made by default because only one team did systematic experiments to characterize them, however for lipophilic drugs.15,16 Nevertheless, solubilization enhancement ratios between 6 and 22 could be calculated in the case of cholesterol solubilization by bile salt–sodium oleate or bile salt–monoolein mixed micelles,47–49 showing that enhancement could also be high for dietary lipophilic bioactives. More research is needed to identify the parameters affecting their solubilization enhancement ratios, as values below 2 were also reported for cholesterol and vitamin E under certain conditions.47,48,50
These trends are in agreement with those obtained for β-carotene bioaccessibility from mixed corn oil–citrus oil nanoemulsions.23,24 The third phenomenon was identified to explain the data, and also the assembling of the micelles, larger for glycerides–bile salt mixed micelles compared to bile salt micelles (for citrus oil alone). This effect is not directly taken into account in the simulations, but is likely included indirectly through the solubilization enhancement ratio. Thus this triglyceride–limonene mixtures simulation shows that very good agreement with the literature can be obtained when the most influential parameters are taken into account, namely the viscosity of oil mixtures and the formation of mixed micelles.
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