MIT researchers add tiny nutritive particles into staple food to fight malnutrition

2019-11-14 Xinhua Editor:Li Yan
Sadia Ibrahim stands inside her room where she receives medical treatment at an anti-malnutrition treating center in Al-Sabeen hospital in Sanaa, Yemen, on Sept. 12, 2019. Sadia Ibrahim facepalmed herself feeling dizzy after the doctor diagnosed her as

Sadia Ibrahim stands inside her room where she receives medical treatment at an anti-malnutrition treating center in Al-Sabeen hospital in Sanaa, Yemen, on Sept. 12, 2019. Sadia Ibrahim facepalmed herself feeling dizzy after the doctor diagnosed her as "skin and bones." (Photo by Mohammed Mohammed/Xinhua)

Researchers from Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) developed a new strategy to fortify staple food with micronutrients like vitamin A and iron, which can cope with nutrient deficiencies more effectively in less-developed countries.

The study published on Wednesday in the journal Science Translational Medicine showed that they encapsulated key micronutrients in a tiny biocompatible polymer that prevents the nutrients from being degraded during storage or cooking.

The polymer called bulk moulding compound (BMC) could encapsulate 11 different micronutrients, including zinc, vitamin B2, niacin, biotin, vitamin C, iron and vitamin A.

The researchers could also encapsulate combinations of up to four of the micronutrients together, according to the study.

The lab tests showed that those nutrients were unharmed after being boiled for two hours and they survived the oxidizing chemicals found in fruits and vegetables.

When the particles were exposed to very acidic conditions (pH 1.5, typical of the pH in the stomach), the polymer became soluble and the micronutrients were released, the tests showed.

In tests in mice, MIT researchers showed that particles broke down in the stomach and the cargo traveled to the small intestine, where it can be absorbed.

Then, they decided to test the encapsulated micronutrients in human subjects, by incorporating encapsulated iron sulfate into flour and using it to bake bread.

They found that the iron absorption rates was very similar to the percentage for unencapsulated iron sulfate, when the percentage of iron sulfate in the particles is about 18 percent.

The researchers are now trying to have a similar study in a country where many people experience micronutrient deficiencies, and to get a regulatory approval from the joint expert committee on food additives of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization and the World Health Organization.

About 2 billion people around the world suffer from deficiencies of key micronutrients, and 2 million children die from those deficiencies every year, said the study.

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