Dietary Bioactive Compounds: Metabolism, Mechanisms and Translational Significance for Health and Prevention of Diseases
A special issue of Molecules (ISSN 1420-3049). This special issue belongs to the section "Metabolites".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (30 June 2015) | Viewed by 157021
Special Issue Editors
Interests: farm-to-fork; nutrition and the lifecycle; nutrition and stress
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
A large range of molecules (often non-nutrients) found in the diet hold bioactive properties. A non-exhaustive list include the large (poly)phenolic family of compounds, glucosinolates, phytoestrogens, plant sterols, long chain fatty acids, selected vitamins and minerals, cereal fibre, and carotenoids.
Selected foods, predominantly of plant origin, have gained an important place in the consumer’s diet with a view to sustain health. The focus on dietary bioactive compounds is directly aligned with the emergence of functional foods in the last two decades, in parallel with the need to substantiate health claims.
Experimental design and appropriate methodologies are especially important to ascertain the metabolism, biological function, and mechanism of action of dietary bioactive compounds. An important addition is the need to discuss the translational value of these findings, and how they can influence commercial potential, public health, and clinical decision-making.
Contributions to this issue, both in the form of original research or review articles, may cover all aspects of dietary bioactive compound research, linking metabolism, biological function, and health or disease prevention. Studies with multidisciplinary input, offering new methodologies or insights are particularly welcome.
Dr. Emilie Combet
Dr. Maria Rosário Bronze
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- diet
- functional foods
- bioactive compounds
- health
- disease prevention
- metabolism
- function
- mechanism of action
- health claims
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