Abstract

Glucoraphanin from broccoli and its sprouts and seeds is a water soluble and relatively inert precursor of sulforaphane, the reactive isothiocyanate that potently inhibits neoplastic cellular processes and prevents a number of disease states. Sulforaphane is difficult to deliver in an enriched and stable form for purposes of direct human consumption. We have focused upon evaluating the bioavailability of sulforaphane, either by direct administration of glucoraphanin (a glucosinolate, or β-thioglucoside-N-hydroxysulfate), or by co-administering glucoraphanin and the enzyme myrosinase to catalyze its conversion to sulforaphane at economic, reproducible and sustainable yields. We show that following administration of glucoraphanin in a commercially prepared dietary supplement to a small number of human volunteers, the volunteers had equivalent output of sulforaphane metabolites in their urine to that which they produced when given an equimolar dose of glucoraphanin in a simple boiled and lyophilized extract of broccoli sprouts. Furthermore, when either broccoli sprouts or seeds are administered directly to subjects without prior extraction and consequent inactivation of endogenous myrosinase, regardless of the delivery matrix or dose, the sulforaphane in those preparations is 3- to 4-fold more bioavailable than sulforaphane from glucoraphanin delivered without active plant myrosinase. These data expand upon earlier reports of inter- and intra-individual variability, when glucoraphanin was delivered in either teas, juices, or gelatin capsules, and they confirm that a variety of delivery matrices may be equally suitable for glucoraphanin supplementation (e.g. fruit juices, water, or various types of capsules and tablets).

Highlights

  • The effectiveness of high consumption of plant-based diets in reducing the risk of cancer and many other chronic diseases is widely recognized

  • We compare the bioavailability of a simple powder made by lyophilizing a boiling water extract of glucoraphanin-rich broccoli sprouts that contains no active myrosinase, with equimolar quantities of a commercially produced extract (a “dietary supplement”) derived from broccoli seeds

  • This group encapsulated our GR-rich broccoli sprout extract in identical green opaque “0” gel-caps at comparable low- and high-dose levels (69 and 230 μmol of GR), equivalent to what are in their high-dose and low-dose retail “OncoPLEXTM” capsules

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Summary

Introduction

The effectiveness of high consumption of plant-based diets in reducing the risk of cancer and many other chronic diseases is widely recognized. We compare the bioavailability of a simple powder made by lyophilizing a boiling water extract of glucoraphanin-rich broccoli sprouts that contains no active myrosinase, with equimolar quantities of a commercially produced extract (a “dietary supplement”) derived from broccoli seeds.

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