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Dive into the research topics where Isabel Seiquer is active.

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Featured researches published by Isabel Seiquer.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2014

Maillard reaction products modulate gut microbiota composition in adolescents

Isabel Seiquer; Luis A. Rubio; M. Jesús Peinado; Cristina Delgado-Andrade; María Pilar Navarro

SCOPE Scarce data are available concerning effects of certain bioactive substances such as Maillard reaction products (MRP) on the gut microbiota composition, and the question of how a diet rich in MRP affects gut microbiota in humans is still open. METHODS AND RESULTS Two experiments were conducted. In expt. 1, adolescents consumed diets either high or low in MRP in a two-period crossover trial; in expt. 2, rats were fed diets supplemented or not with MRP model-systems. Intestinal microbiota composition in fecal (adolescents) or cecal (rat) samples was assessed by qPCR analysis. Negative correlations were found in the human assay between lactobacilli numbers and dietary advanced MRP (r = -0.418 and -0.387, for hydroxymethylfurfural and carboxymethyl-lysine respectively, p < 0.05), whereas bifidobacteria counts were negatively correlated with Amadori compounds intake. In the rat assay, total bacteria and lactobacilli were negatively correlated with MRP intake (r = -0.674,-0.675 and -0.676, for Amadori compounds, hydroxymethylfurfural and carboxymethyl-lysine respectively, p < 0.05), but no correlations were found with bifidobacteria. CONCLUSIONS Dietary MRP are able to modulate in vivo the intestinal microbiota composition both in humans and in rats, and the specific effects are likely to be linked to the chemical structure and dietary amounts of the different browning compounds.


Critical Reviews in Food Science and Nutrition | 2011

Calcium Nutrition in Adolescence

Marta Mesías; Isabel Seiquer; M. Pilar Navarro

Adolescence is an important period of nutritional vulnerability due to increased dietary requirements for growth and development and special dietary habits. Calcium needs are elevated as a result of the intensive bone and muscular development and thus adequate calcium intake during growth is extremely important to reach the optimum peak bone mass and to protect against osteoporosis in the adult age, a major public health threat whose incidence is increasing in Western countries. However, most children and adolescents worldwide fail to achieve the recommended calcium intake. The hormonal changes associated with the pubertal period promote greater mineral utilization, which needs to be satisfied with suitable calcium consumption. Diet, therefore, must contribute nutrients in sufficient quality and quantity to allow maximum bone mass development. Consequently, adolescents should be educated and encouraged to consume adjusted and balanced diets that, together with healthy lifestyles, enable optimal calcium utilization.


Molecular Nutrition & Food Research | 2009

Intake of Maillard reaction products reduces iron bioavailability in male adolescents.

Marta Mesías García; Isabel Seiquer; Cristina Delgado-Andrade; Gabriel Galdó; María Pilar Navarro

The effects of diets with different Maillard reaction products (MRPs) content on biological iron utilization were compared using in vitro/in vivo assays. Diets were rich (brown diet, BD) or poor (white diet) in MRP. In vitro studies included iron solubility after in vitro digestion of diets and iron transport across Caco-2 cells. In the human assay 18 healthy adolescent males (11-14 years) participated in a 2-wk randomized two-period crossover trial. Subjects collected urine and faeces on the last 3 days of each dietary period, and fasting blood samples were obtained after periods. In vitro dietary iron availability was significantly lower with the BD than the white diet (9.52 and 12.92%, respectively), as a consequence of the lower iron solubility after the in vitro digestion, but not as a result of decreased transport of the remaining soluble iron. The BD consumption increased iron fecal excretion ( approximately 1.4-fold) and significantly decreased its bioavailability ( approximately 2.7-fold), mainly due to the effects found at digestive level. Serum biochemical parameters related to iron metabolism remained unaltered. It is concluded the presence of MRP in the diet negatively affects iron bioavailability. As iron deficiency may be related to learning impairment and to reductions of cognitive and physical functions, possible long-term effects of excessive MRP intake during adolescence warrant attention.


Nutrition | 2011

Increased intake of Maillard reaction products reduces phosphorous digestibility in male adolescents

Cristina Delgado-Andrade; Isabel Seiquer; Marta Mesías García; Gabriel Galdó; M. Pilar Navarro

OBJECTIVE To examine the effects of consuming diets rich in Maillard reaction products (MRPs) on phosphorus bioavailability in male adolescents. METHODS A 2-wk randomized two-period crossover trial was performed among healthy male adolescents aged 11-14 y (n = 20), with a 40-d washout period. The diets consumed were rich (brown diet) or poor (white diet) in MRPs. Three-day balances were performed on the last of each dietary period, and fasting blood samples were obtained. Dietary phosphorus utilization was examined by phosphorus intake in diet and phosphorus output in feces and urine, as measured colorimetrically by the vanadomolibdate procedure. Serum phosphorus, parathyroid hormone, and total alkaline phosphatase were determined. RESULTS A tendency to increase daily phosphorus fecal excretion was observed subsequent to the brown diet consumption compared with the white diet (P = 0.10), which led to significant reductions in phosphorus apparent absorption (P = 0.03) and fractional absorption (P = 0.04). Values of apparent phosphorus retention and bioavailability tended to decrease after the high-MRP diet. Serum parameters analyzed remained unchanged between diets and were within normal values. CONCLUSION The consumption of a rich-MRP diet in male adolescents had a negative influence on dietary phosphorus absorption, tending to decrease the phosphorus balance. Given the actual dietary habits of adolescents, possible long-term repercussions of this kind of diet should be studied.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008

Antioxidant Properties and Metal Chelating Activity of Glucose-Lysine Heated Mixtures : Relationships with Mineral Absorption Across Caco-2 Cell Monolayers

Beatriz Ruiz-Roca; María Pilar Navarro; Isabel Seiquer

Model Maillard reaction products were generated by heating glucose-lysine mixtures (GL) at 150 degrees C for different times (15, 30, 60, and 90 min). Samples were characterized by free lysine, browning, and UV-visible spectra and assessed for antioxidant properties, metal chelating ability, and effects on mineral absorption across Caco-2 monolayers. It was found that the capacity to retard lipid peroxidation in a model linoleic acid emulsion system increased with heating time up to 60 min and then leveled off, whereas the scavenging activity toward 1,1-diphenyl-2-picryl-hydrazyl (DPPH) radicals increased in early periods of the reaction (15 and 30 min of heating) and decreased thereafter. The iron binding affinity of the different samples was not correlated with antioxidant properties, and iron transport in Caco-2 cells was unchanged between samples. On the contrary, copper chelating activity showed significant correlation with free radical scavenging activity and with copper absorption across intestinal cells. It can be concluded that severe heat treatment of GL mixtures maintained the ability to reduce lipid peroxidation but decreased the free radical scavenging activity. Moreover, antiradical activity, copper chelation ability, and positive effects on copper absorption were correlated and associated to compounds formed at early stages of the Maillard reaction.


Food and Chemical Toxicology | 2008

Estimation of hydroxymethylfurfural availability in breakfast cereals. Studies in Caco-2 cells

Cristina Delgado-Andrade; Isabel Seiquer; M. Pilar Navarro; Francisco J. Morales

The transport and availability of hydroxymethylfurfural (HMF), an intermediary product of the Maillard reaction, was investigated in the Caco-2 cell line after in vitro gastrointestinal digestion. The study was carried out at two levels; (a) an HMF-spiked culture medium, and (b) digested commercial breakfast cereals (BC). In both assays, the higher the amount of HMF offered to the cells, the higher the absolute value of transported HMF. However, HMF availability and transport are not directly proportional to the initial HMF content since HMF is partly retained in the non-soluble fraction after digestion. In addition, HMF is degraded to some extent during the gastrointestinal digestion of both HMF-spiked cell medium and BC. Average HMF availability from three commercial breakfast cereals was 9.1% (4.98-12.99%). Variations in HMF availability may be related to the particular composition of each BC, where fibre could play an important role. On the other hand, possible metabolization into the cell should also be considered.


Journal of Dairy Science | 2010

Assessing the effects of severe heat treatment of milk on calcium bioavailability: In vitro and in vivo studies

Isabel Seiquer; Cristina Delgado-Andrade; Ana Haro; Marta Navarro

Thermal processing of milk is a common practice. As milk is the main source of dietary calcium, this study aimed to assess the effects of overheating milk on calcium availability. Thus, thermally damaged milk (overheated, OH, milk; 3 cycles of sterilization at 116 °C, 16 min) was compared with UHT milk (150 °C, 6s) in 2 types of assays: in vitro and in vivo (rats). In addition, the greater Maillard reaction rate associated with thermal treatment in OH milk was confirmed by determining specific (furosine) and unspecific markers (CieLab color). A negative effect on calcium solubility was observed after in vitro digestion of OH milk compared with UHT milk. Feeding rats the diet containing OH milk as the protein source led to significantly lower values of apparent calcium absorption and retention than those found among animals fed the UHT milk diet. Whereas reducing the absorption appears to result mainly from the decreased food intake, the negative effect on retention seems to be due to factors derived from milk thermal damage, such as the formation of Maillard reaction products. It was concluded that milk-processing conditions warrant special attention to prevent impaired dietary calcium utilization. This may be especially important in situations where milk and dairy products are the main dietary components, such as in early infancy.


Journal of The American College of Nutrition | 2008

A Mediterranean Dietary Style Improves Calcium Utilization in Healthy Male Adolescents

Isabel Seiquer; Marta Mesías; Antonio Muñoz Hoyos; Gabriel Galdó; María Pilar Navarro

Objective: To examine the effects of consuming a diet based on the Mediterranean patterns on calcium availability and metabolism in male adolescents. Design: A longitudinal study divided into two periods: a 3-day basal period, during which the subjects (n = 20; 12.9 ± 1.14 years) consumed their usual diet (basal diet, BD), and a 28-day nutritional intervention period, in which an intervention Mediterranean-type diet - was consumed (ID). Methods: Dietary calcium utilization was assessed by means of calcium intake in food and calcium output in feces and urine as measured by flame absorption spectrophotometry. In addition, markers of calcium metabolism (serum Ca, parathyroid hormone and total alkaline phosphatase) and bone resorption (urine deoxypiridinoline) were measured. Results: No differences in total calcium intake were found between the two diets, but food sources of dietary calcium varied significantly. Compared with the BD, the consumption of the ID resulted in significant increases in calcium absorption (∼ 40%, p = 0.04) and retention (∼ 80%, p = 0.008), and a considerable decrease in urinary calcium excretion (∼ 40%, p = 0.01).The variations observed in bone markers reflected a higher bone turnover rate after the ID consumption. Conclusions: A varied diet based on Mediterranean diet patterns during adolescence greatly improves dietary calcium utilization, which may help to maximize the peak bone mass and prevent related diseases, such as osteoporosis.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2009

Influence of Diets Rich in Maillard Reaction Products on Calcium Bioavailability. Assays in Male Adolescents and in Caco-2 Cells

Marta Mesías; Isabel Seiquer; María Pilar Navarro

The effects of the high intake of Maillard reaction products (MRP) on calcium availability in adolescents and across Caco-2 cell monolayers were examined. In a 2 week randomized two-period crossover trial, 18 male adolescents consumed two diets, named white diet (WD) and brown diet (BD), which were poor and rich in MRP, respectively. A 3 day balance was performed at the end of each period, and fasting blood samples were collected. Calcium solubility and absorption across Caco-2 cells were studied after the in vitro digestion of the diets. The in vitro assay showed similar solubility after the in vitro digestion and similar transport across Caco-2 cells. In accordance, calcium bioavailability in adolescents did not vary between the diets (%WD = 40.4 +/- 5.1, %BD = 38.2 +/- 3.6). Serum and urine biochemical parameters related to calcium status and bone metabolism remained unaltered. Only deoxypyridinoline values were significantly lower after consumption of the BD (13.0 +/- 1.1 compared to 18.3 +/- 2.1 nM/Mm Cr in the WD), possibly indicative of less efficient bone turnover during this period. As calcium acquired during adolescence is essential to maximize peak bone mass and to prevent osteoporosis, possible long-term effects of excessive MRP intake during this period warrant attention.


Food Chemistry | 2017

Characterization of Arbequina virgin olive oils produced in different regions of Brazil and Spain: Physicochemical properties, oxidative stability and fatty acid profile.

Thays H. Borges; J.A. Pereira; Carmen Cabrera-Vique; L. Lara; Adelson F. Oliveira; Isabel Seiquer

Production of virgin olive oil is beginning in Brazil. This paper analyzes the characteristics of the EVOO Arbequina from Brazil in comparison with Spanish Arbequina from different regions. Quality parameters, oxidative stability, pigments, colour and fatty acid profile were assessed, and relationships with geographic and climatic conditions were studied. All the samples presented good quality and met EU standards for extra-virgin olive oil, but there were significant differences between regions and countries for many of the parameters evaluated. Major differences between Brazilian and Spanish samples were observed for free acidity and colour of the oils, as well as minor variations in the fatty acid profile. The colour differences were related to rainfall, whereas the fatty acid content was strongly influenced by altitude and temperature. These results highlight the fact that geographic area and environmental factors influence the characteristics of Arbequina oil and play an important role in newly introduced cultivars.

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Cristina Delgado-Andrade

Spanish National Research Council

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M. Pilar Navarro

Spanish National Research Council

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María Pilar Navarro

Spanish National Research Council

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Ana Haro

Spanish National Research Council

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Marta Mesías

Spanish National Research Council

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R. Nieto

Spanish National Research Council

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J. F. Aguilera

Spanish National Research Council

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L. Lara

Spanish National Research Council

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