Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Trump promised cheaper drugs. Some prices dropped. Many others shot up.

    mayo 7, 2026

    Question on state’s sanctuary law turned into personal jabs during California gubernatorial debate

    mayo 7, 2026

    Self-Dealing and Self-Deluding Two Sides of Trump Coin

    mayo 7, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Trump promised cheaper drugs. Some prices dropped. Many others shot up.
    • Question on state’s sanctuary law turned into personal jabs during California gubernatorial debate
    • Self-Dealing and Self-Deluding Two Sides of Trump Coin
    • Justice Department Wants to Get Trump Out of E. Jean Carroll Payment
    • The Love Behind Sarah J. Maas’ Success: Meet Papa Maas
    • ‘Time to say goodbye,’ Epstein allegedly wrote in newly released purported suicide note
    • Walbert Ureña stymies White Sox as Angels capture series win
    • Does Skipping Meals Help You Lose Weight or Slow Metabolism? What You Need to Know
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Al Punto Hoy
    • National News
    • International News
    • Politics
    • Economy
    • Health
    • Entertainment
    • Sports
    Al Punto Hoy
    Portada » Punicalagin and urolithins from pomegranates protect your heart
    Health

    Punicalagin and urolithins from pomegranates protect your heart

    Al Punto Hoy from ANASTACIO ALEGRIABy Al Punto Hoy from ANASTACIO ALEGRIAmayo 6, 2026No hay comentarios2 Views
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
    Punicalagin and urolithins from pomegranates protect your heart
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
    Punicalagin and urolithins from pomegranates protect your heart

    Why do people who eat a lot of pomegranates tend to have a healthier heart? According to biomedical researchers based in Wales, UK, we might have an answer. The scientists report that punicalagin, an antioxidant that gives pomegranates their rich red hue, seems to have powerful cardioprotective effects.

    But here’s the kicker: many of us won’t get much benefit from eating the fruit. It turns out that we can’t absorb this heart-healthy chemical directly from pomegranates. Luckily for us, the researchers say they’ve identified the key chemical players that could protect your heart – and they can be extracted and purified into a form we can digest.

    In a study published in April 2026 in the scientific journal Antioxidants, investigators led by Professor Dipak P. Ramji PhD, professor of cardiovascular science at Cardiff University’s School of Biosciences, report that antioxidant subunits of punicalagin have a calming effect on the inflammatory processes that cause atherosclerotic plaques to form. These molecules may also have a protective role against heart attacks and strokes due to their ability to stabilize the fatty deposits that break away and block blood flow to the heart and brain.

    Put Down the Pomegranates For Now

    Should we all rush out and buy pomegranate? Ramji explained to MNB that the secondary metabolites in the fruit that his team are working on have low bioavailability. This means that our bodies find it very, very hard to absorb and use much of it.

    According to Ramji, we can’t directly absorb punicalagin and its derivatives through our digestive system very well. Instead we rely on the bacteria living in our digestive system to break these antioxidants down into smaller, easier to consume molecules.

    What’s more, the type of bug that digests punicalagin for us seems to be rather selective about its hosts. This means not everybody has the right combination of gut bacteria to get the benefit from pomegranates.

    The good thing is that researchers like Ramji and his colleagues have discovered the specific derivatives of Punicalagin that pack the most punch. Urolithins. Our cells can take up and use urolithins, and luckily for us, these molecules can be extracted from fruit and purified. Right now researchers are developing them as nutraceuticals.

    Pac Man and Pomegranates

    So how could punicalagin derivatives, urolithins, help our hearts?

    It’s all about inflammation. If you’ve ever heard of fat clogging up your arteries, you might be surprised to find out that the problem isn’t necessarily that there are some fatty acids hanging out getting in the way.

    The real problem is that the Pac Man-like white blood cells – macrophages and monocytes our immune system uses to chomp up and dispose of cellular trash tend to freak out when they suck up too much fat. Their reaction to fat deposits in our arteries triggers an immune overreaction.

    Stuck in turbo mode, these cells recruit other kinds of inflammatory cells that put the fat on blast, causing collateral damage to the walls of your blood vessels. Over time, the blood vessel walls develop scar tissue and scabs that contain a mix of fat, old white blood cells, platelets, etc. that can break off and stop up your arteries. All this inflammatory activity also makes our blood vessel walls thicker and more stiff – making your heart work harder to push your blood around.

    Antioxidants are often praised for their role in protecting DNA and important enzymes from reactive oxygen species, but scientists have also discovered that they can modulate our inflammatory responses.

    Cardioprotective properties Punicalagin/Urolithins

    Ramji and his team, with Sulaiman Alalawi at the tip of the spear, used a variety of lab-based experiments involving tissue samples, cell culture and mouse models to figure out what cardioprotective properties punicalagin and urolithins have.

    The team first established which derivatives of punicalagin have antioxidative effects in a test tube and on a variety of human cell samples. Then they went on to test how punicalagin and urolithins should affect the ability of monocytes to suck up fatty acids. They simply dissolved the punicalagin and urolithins and added them to human monocytes in a dish and introduced some lipid-based dye. The antioxidants significantly reduced the amount of dye the monocytes took in.

    Next, they showed that adding punicalagin and urolithins A and C to a dish of monocytes crawling towards a target slowed them down dramatically. They also saw that these punicalagin and metabolite soaked monocytes passed on sucking up labelled fatty acids added to the mix that they would usually hurry to absorb. Testing the effects of punicalagin and its metabolites on macrophages and cultured aortic blood vessel cells, showed that adding these chemicals reduced markers of inflammation in response to cholesterol.

    So in a test tube or a dish of disembodied cells, punicalagin and urolithins seemed pretty handy at calming those Pac Man like immune cells, but what about real life?

    Atherosclerotic Mouse Models

    The team fed laboratory mice a high fat diet to trigger atherosclerosis. They gave a subset of the mice urolithin A supplements mixed into their food. After a period of three months, they sacrificed the mice and took a look inside their arteries.

    As they had hopes, the mice who ate urolithin A had fewer plaques. The ones they had were smaller and contained fewer white blood cells. The insides of the blood vessels near the plagues showed less stiffening and fewer blockages in mice who had never eaten urolithin A.

    Finally, they surveyed at the blood lipid results of both sets of mice. Both had around the same lipid numbers. This means that the beneficial effect that urolithin A had on the mice was more likely to be on the immune response than because it somehow lowered their cholesterol levels.

    Supplements Soon?

    So all in all, what’s next for punicalagin and urolithin A?

    Watch this space, maybe while you drink some pomegranate juice if you are lucky enough to have the right microbiome. As Rami says, ‘Our findings show that it’s not just what we eat, but how our gut bacteria process those foods that really matters for heart health.’

    Source

    Alalawi S, Rifqi D, Alhamadi A, et al. Anti-Atherogenic Actions of Pomegranate Polyphenol Punicalagin and Its Metabolites: In Vitro Effects on Vascular Cells and In Vivo Atheroprotection by Urolithin A via Anti-Inflammatory and Plaque-Stabilising Mechanisms. Antioxidants. 2026;15(4):507. doi:10.3390/antiox15040507

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email
    Al Punto Hoy from ANASTACIO ALEGRIA
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Does Skipping Meals Help You Lose Weight or Slow Metabolism? What You Need to Know

    mayo 6, 2026

    Johnson & Johnson’s IBD therapy fails to yield meaningful improvement

    mayo 5, 2026

    How a Rectal Exam Helped Restore a Patient’s Irregular Heart Rhythm Without Treatment

    mayo 4, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Pharmalittle: Trump getting more credit than Biden on drug prices

    marzo 13, 2026185

    Birthright Citizenship Case at Supreme Court Affects All Americans

    abril 1, 2026138

    Nearly locked into play-in, Warriors try to improve seeding vs. Wizards

    marzo 27, 202674

    Trump says other nations have Tomahawk missiles after strike hits school, kills more than 160 people

    marzo 10, 202623
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news from alpuntohoy.

    About Us
    About Us

    Welcome to AlPuntoHoy, your trusted source for timely, accurate, and engaging news from around the world. Our mission is to keep readers informed with reliable reporting, insightful analysis, and comprehensive coverage across a wide range of topics.

    WhatsApp
    Most Popular

    Pharmalittle: Trump getting more credit than Biden on drug prices

    marzo 13, 2026185

    Birthright Citizenship Case at Supreme Court Affects All Americans

    abril 1, 2026138

    Nearly locked into play-in, Warriors try to improve seeding vs. Wizards

    marzo 27, 202674
    Categorías
    • Economy
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • International News
    • National News
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Uncategorized
    © 2026 All rights reserved AlPuntoHoy.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.