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Eating broccoli may fight ‘leaky’ gut

Like broccoli? You're in luck. New research says the green veggie benefits gut health.

Eating broccoli may help promote a health gut, new research indicates.

“Keeping your gut healthy and making sure you have good barrier functions so you’re not getting this leaky effect would be really big.”

In a study, when mice ate broccoli with their regular diet, they were better able to tolerate digestive issues similar to symptoms of leaky gut and colitis than mice that were not on a broccoli-supplemented diet, according to Gary Perdew, a professor in agricultural sciences at Penn State.

Perdew adds that other vegetables, like brussels sprouts and cauliflower, may also have similar gut health properties.

“There are a lot of reasons we want to explore helping with gastrointestinal health and one reason is if you have problems, like a leaky gut, and start to suffer inflammation, that may then lead to other conditions, like arthritis and heart disease,” says Perdew. “Keeping your gut healthy and making sure you have good barrier functions so you’re not getting this leaky effect would be really big.”

Good intestinal barrier function means that the gastrointestinal tract is helping protect the intestines from toxins and harmful microorganisms, while allowing nutrients to pass into the system, he says.

In the gut

According to Perdew, the key to the process may be a receptor in the gut called Aryl hydrocarbon receptor, or AHR. The receptor helps the body regulate its reaction to certain environmental contaminants and triggers other responses to toxin exposure.

The researchers suggest that cruciferous vegetables—such as broccoli, brussels sprouts, and cabbage—contain an organic chemical compound called indole glucosinolates, which breaks down into other compounds, including indolocarbazole—ICZ—in the stomach.

“Now, three and a half cups is a lot, but it’s not a huge amount, really.”

When ICZ binds to and activates the Aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) in the intestinal lining, it aids in maintaining a healthy balance in the gut flora and immune surveillance, and enhances host barrier function, according to the researchers. This may help prevent diseases, such as various cancers and Crohn’s Disease, caused by inflammation in the lining of the gut.

According to Perdew, hyper-activating the AHR can cause toxicity, but using broccoli to activate the receptor locally—in the gut—rather than systemically might help avoid some of these problems.

“Dioxin, for example, activates this receptor, and if you hyper-activate it with dioxin, it will cause toxicity,” says Perdew. “What we were interested in is: Could you locally activate the receptor naturally at a level that would cause only modest AHR activation in the gut, but not cause systemic activation, which could possibly lead to negative effects?”

The researchers used two genetic lines of mice in the study to focus on AHR. One line had a low ability to bind ICZ to AHR, while the other line had a high ability to bind ICZ to AHR. They added 15 percent broccoli to the diets of both groups of mice.

After adding a substance that causes digestive problems, the researchers say that the mice with a higher ability to bind ICZ to the AHR were protected from a chemical that induced digestive problems, but the mice with the lower affinity suffered from the toxic insult.

How much broccoli?

For humans, the amount in the experiment would be equivalent to eating about 3.5 cups of broccoli each day, according to Perdew.

“Now, three and a half cups is a lot, but it’s not a huge amount, really,” says Perdew. “We used a cultivar—or variety—with about half the amount of this chemical in it, and there are cultivars with twice as much. Also, brussels sprouts have three times as much, which would mean a cup of brussels sprouts could get us to the same level.”

Because people with certain digestive conditions, such as colitis, are often warned to avoid too much roughage in their diets, future research may include determining the best ways for people to consume the broccoli—or other vegetables with similar effects—to receive the same health benefits, without causing any other associated digestive problems from the fibrous vegetables.

The United States Department of Agriculture National Institute of Food and Agriculture and the National Institutes of Health supported this work.

The researchers report their findings in the Journal of Functional Foods.

Source: Penn State

The post Eating broccoli may fight ‘leaky’ gut appeared first on Futurity.

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