Dietary Organosulfur-Containing Compounds and Their Health-Promotion Mechanisms

Annu Rev Food Sci Technol. 2022 Mar 25:13:287-313. doi: 10.1146/annurev-food-052720-010127. Epub 2022 Jan 6.

Abstract

Dietary organosulfur-containing compounds (DOSCs) in fruits, vegetables, and edible mushrooms may hold the key to the health-promotion benefits of these foods. Yet their action mechanisms are not clear, partially due to their high reactivity, which leads to the formation of complex compounds during postharvest processing. Among postharvest processing methods, thermal treatment is the most common way to process these edible plants rich in DOSCs, which undergo complex degradation pathways with the generation of numerous derivatives over a short time. At low temperatures, DOSCs are biotransformed slowly during fermentation to different metabolites (e.g., thiols, sulfides, peptides), whose distinctive biological activity remains largely unexplored. In this review, we discuss the bioavailability of DOSCs in human digestion before illustrating their potential mechanisms for health promotion related to cardiovascular health, cancer chemoprevention, and anti-inflammatory and antimicrobial activities. In particular, it is interesting that different DOSCs react with glutathione or cysteine, leading to the slow release of hydrogen sulfide (H2S), which has broad bioactivity in chronic disease prevention. In addition, DOSCs may interact with protein thiol groups of different protein targets of importance related to inflammation and phase II enzyme upregulation, among other action pathways critical for health promotion.

Keywords: biotransformation; dietary organosulfur compounds; functional foods; hydrogen sulfide donors; thermal processing.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Cysteine / chemistry
  • Cysteine / metabolism
  • Diet
  • Health Promotion
  • Humans
  • Hydrogen Sulfide* / chemistry
  • Hydrogen Sulfide* / metabolism
  • Vegetables / metabolism

Substances

  • Cysteine
  • Hydrogen Sulfide