Abstract

Resveratrol oligomers are biologically active polyphenols found in wine. No information about the bioavailability of these polyphenols is available. In order to discover if the resveratrol oligomers can pass the intestinal barrier, transport of the dimer ε-viniferin and the tetramer hopeaphenol was studied in the Caco-2 transwell system. A flux through the cell monolayer could neither be observed for ε-viniferin nor for hopeaphenol (apparent permeability coefficient (Papp)<1×10−6cms−1). In contrast, resveratrol showed a Papp of 11.9×10−6cms−1. Nevertheless, about 16–30% of the oligomers were found in the lysed cellular fraction. This leads to the conclusion that the intestinal absorption rate of the two resveratrol oligomers, ε-viniferin and hopeaphenol, is low and negligible when compared to resveratrol. Therefore, it is unlikely that the oligomers could elicit a systemic biological effect after dietary intake. However, the compounds may act locally on the intestinal epithelium.

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