Pj. Harris et al., ADSORPTION OF A HYDROPHOBIC MUTAGEN TO CEREAL BRANS AND CEREAL BRAN DIETARY-FIBERS, Mutation research. Genetic toxicology and environmental mutagenesis, 412(3), 1998, pp. 323-331
The abilities of brans from the cereals barley, oats, maize, rice, and
wheat to adsorb in vitro the hydrophobic, environmental mutagen 1,8-d
initropyrene (DNP) were investigated using a mutagenicity assay, These
brans were obtained from known cultivars using defined milling condit
ions and were chemically characterised. The abilities of total and ins
oluble dietary fibre preparations obtained from these brans to adsorb
DNP were also investigated. The predicted weight of each bran required
to adsorb 50% of the added DNP was used to compare the adsorptive abi
lities of the different brans, The brans were ranked in the order (mos
t effective to least effective): rice, wheat, maize, barley, and oats.
The adsorptive abilities of the dietary fibre preparations were not s
ignificantly different from the bran from which they were prepared. Ho
wever, if the dietary fibres (cell walls) were the only components ads
orbing the DNP, we would have expected the dietary fibre preparations
to have adsorbed more DNP than the equivalent unextracted bran, This s
uggests that other components, probably starch, also adsorb DNP in the
unextracted brans. It is not known why brans from different cereal sp
ecies differ in adsorptive ability but the lignified cell walls in whe
at bran may be important in conferring good adsorptive properties to t
his bran. The possible relationship between adsorptive ability and abi
lity of the bran from a particular species to protect against colorect
al cancer is discussed. (C) 1998 Elsevier Science B.V.