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ARS Home » Northeast Area » Ithaca, New York » Robert W. Holley Center for Agriculture & Health » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #89551

Title: TRACE ELEMENT BIOAVAILABILITY AS EXEMPLIFIED BY IRON AND ZINC

Author
item House, William

Submitted to: Field Crops Research
Publication Type: Review Article
Publication Acceptance Date: 9/2/1998
Publication Date: N/A
Citation: N/A

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: Plant foods can be improved as sources of essential micronutrients either by increasing the concentrations of nutrients in the food, increasing the bioavailability of micronutrients in the food, or both of these. Quantities of minerals in edible portions of crops are influenced by numerous complex, dynamic and interacting factors, including plant genotype, soil properties, environmental conditions and nutrient interactions. Similarly, numerous dietary and host factors interact to affect the bioavailability to people of mineral nutrients in plant foods. Micronutrient bioavailability can be improved by either increasing the quantity of substances within plant foods that enhance absorption and utilization of micronutrients or by decreasing the quantity of dietary antinutrients that inhibit micronutrient uptake; however, processes that control and regulate the bioavailability of trace element in plant foods consumed in mixed diets are not fully understood. Use of either stable or radioactive isotopes incorporated intrinsically into edible portions of plant foods during plant growth will likely provide the most reliable estimates of the bioavailability of micronutrients consumed in mixed diets. Increasing the dietary supply of staple plant foods rich in trace elements combined with increased knowledge of micronutrient bioavailability from these foods will meaningfully improve the nutritional health and well being of people.