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ARS Home » Northeast Area » Ithaca, New York » Robert W. Holley Center for Agriculture & Health » Plant, Soil and Nutrition Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #267345

Title: White beans provide more bioavailable iron than red beans: studies in poultry (Gallus gallus) and an in vitro digestion/Caco-2 model

Author
item Tako, Elad
item Glahn, Raymond

Submitted to: International Journal for Vitamin and Nutrition Research
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: 11/21/2010
Publication Date: 12/29/2010
Citation: Tako, E.N., Glahn, R.P. 2010. White beans provide more bioavailable iron than red beans: studies in poultry (Gallus gallus) and an in vitro digestion/Caco-2 model. International Journal for Vitamin and Nutrition Research. 80(6)416:429.

Interpretive Summary: This study was to determine if in vivo studies would support the observation of our lab’s in vitro studies which indicates that beans high in polyphenols (colored beans) are less bioavailable than white beans. Four different diets using either white or red beans (supplemented and non-supplemented with iron) were fed to young chicks and the physical and genetic status of the chicks were checked over several weeks. The data suggests that white beans were more bioavailable than red beans and supports the in vitro observations.

Technical Abstract: Iron-biofortification of crops is a strategy that alleviates iron deficiency. The common bean (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) is an attractive candidate for biofortification. However, beans are high in poly-phenols that may inhibit iron absorption. In vitro studies have shown that iron bioavailability from white beans is higher than that from colored beans. In this study, our objective was to determine if white beans contain more bioavailable iron than red beans and to determine if the in vitro observations of bean-iron bioavailability would be evident in an in vivo feeding trial. We compared iron bioavailability between diets containing either white (Matterhorn) or red (Merlot) beans, which differ in polyphenol content. One-week-old chicks (Gallus gallus) were divided into four groups: 1. “WB”: 40% white-bean diet; 2. “RB” :40% red-bean diet; 3. “WB+Fe”: 40 % white-bean diet; 4. “RB +Fe”: 40 % red-bean diet (51, 47, 179, and 175 ppm iron, respectively). Diets 1 and 2 had no supplemental iron; whereas 125 ug/g iron was added to diets 3 and 4. For 8 weeks, hemoglobin, feed consumption, and body weights were measured. Divalent metal transporter 1 (iron-uptake-transporter), duodenal-cytochrome-B (iron reductase), and ferroportin (iron-exporter) expressions were higher (p <0.05), villus-surface-area (tissue iron-deficiency adaptation) was greater in the “RB” group vs. other groups. Cecal microflora was similar between treatments. Hemoglobin, body-hemoglobin iron, and body weights were lower in the “RB” group vs. other groups (p<0.05). In vitro analysis showed lower ferritin formation (less bioavailable iron) in cells exposed to the “RB” diet. We conclude that the in vivo results support the in vitro observations; i.e., white beans contain more bioavailable iron than red beans.