# Quantification of Naturally Occurring Prebiotics in Selected Foods

**Authors:** Arianna Natale, Federica Fiori, Federica Turati, Carlo La Vecchia, Maria Parpinel, Marta Rossi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/nu17040683 · Nutrients · 2025-02-14

## TL;DR

This study measures prebiotic content in various foods and estimates prebiotic intake in an Italian population to better understand their health impact.

## Contribution

The study provides a comprehensive quantification of FOSs and GOSs in 35 foods using a consistent analytical method.

## Key findings

- FOSs were highest in cereal products like wheat bran and whole-meal rye flour.
- GOSs were most abundant in legumes, particularly dried soy products.
- Estimated mean daily intake of FOSs was 0.236 g and GOSs was 0.371 g in the Italian population.

## Abstract

Background: Prebiotics are non-digestible dietary compounds, defined as substrates that are utilised by host microorganisms conferring a health benefit. Although fructo-oligosaccharides (FOSs) and galacto-oligosaccharides (GOSs) are among the most studied prebiotics and support intestinal normobiosis, comprehensive data on their content in foods remain limited. Objectives: The objective was to quantify the content of FOSs (kestose, nystose, and 1 F-β-fructofuranosylnystose) and GOSs (raffinose and stachyose) in 35 foods, including fruit and nuts, legumes, and cereals. We also estimated the intakes of prebiotics in an Italian population. Methods: We analysed the prebiotic content in foods using high-performance anion-exchange chromatography with pulsed amperometric detection (HPAEC-PAD). We estimated the prebiotic intake of 100 healthy controls from a case-control study on colorectal cancer conducted in Italy between 2017 and 2019. We used dietary information collected through a food frequency questionnaire and the prebiotic data quantified in this and a previous study. Results: FOSs were mostly detected in cereal products, with wheat bran and whole-meal rye flour containing the highest amount (around 0.7 g/100 g each). GOSs were most abundant in legumes, especially in dried soy products (around 4.0 g/100 g each). Mean daily intake was 0.236 g for total FOSs and 0.371 g for total GOSs. Wheat bran, raspberries, chestnuts, walnuts, raisins, soy milk, and soy yoghurt overall accounted for 3.9% of kestose, 1.2% of nystose, 0% of 1F-β-fructofuranosylnystose, 15.5% of raffinose, and 8.3% of stachyose total intakes. Conclusions: The present study enables the development of a comprehensive database on prebiotic content in foods through a consistent analytical method. This makes prebiotic intake assessments more accurate than previously available data and facilitates future epidemiological studies investigating their potential effects on health.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** fructo-oligosaccharides (PubChem CID 439709), galacto-oligosaccharides (PubChem CID 871), kestose (PubChem CID 9914062), nystose (PubChem CID 166775), raffinose (PubChem CID 439242), stachyose (PubChem CID 439531)
- **Diseases:** colorectal cancer (MONDO:0005575)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** colorectal cancer (MESH:D015179)
- **Chemicals:** nystose (MESH:C043600), FOSs (MESH:C116580), stachyose (MESH:C005695), 1 F-beta-fructofuranosylnystose (-), Prebiotics (MESH:D056692), raffinose (MESH:D011887)

## Full text

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## References

56 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11858256/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11858256