Purple Sweet Potato Has Increased Amount Of Anti-Cancer Components

A Kansas State University researcher is studying the potential health benefits of a specially bred purple sweet potato because its dominant purple color results in an increased amount of anti-cancer components.

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K-State’s Soyoung Lim, doctoral student in human nutrition, Manhattan, is working with George Wang, associate professor of human nutrition at K-State, to understand the pigment effects of a Kansas-bred purple sweet potato on cancer prevention.

Lim said purple sweet potatoes have high contents of anthocyanin, which is a pigment that presents the purple color in the vegetable. The pigment can produce red, blue and purple colors depending on the source’s chemical structure, such as in foods like blueberries, red grapes, and red cabbage.

She said anthocyanins have been epidemiologically associated with a reduced cancer risk, but the anti-cancer ability of the purple sweet potato has not been well investigated.

Lim used a sweet potato with pronounced purple flesh and skin that was developed by K-State’s Ted Carey, professor of horticulture, at K-State’s John C. Pair Horticultural Center in Haysville.

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“Sometimes we can find purple sweet potatoes in the grocery store, but they don’t have this purple color on the skin and inside,” Lim said.

Three different purple sweet potatoes were used that had varying amounts of anthocyanin for the project. To quantify the amount in each potato, Lim extracted pigments from the vegetables and injected them into an HPLC-MS Analysis, which she said is a method that separates components.

The potatoes were segregated by multiple traits based on flesh pigmentation and fiber contents. The analysis determined that the Kansas-bred potato had significantly higher anthocyanin contents compared to the other potatoes. The analysis also found two derivatives of anthocyanin that were dominant: cyanidin and peonidin, Lim said.

Lim also measured the potatoes’ total phenolic content. Lim said phenols are chemical compounds that have been found to have anti-aging and antioxidant components. The specially bred purple sweet potato had a much higher total phenolic content and antioxidant capacity than the other regularly occurring purple sweet potatoes, she said.

The K-State researchers also wanted to see the specific effects of cyanidin and peonidin. Lim treated human colon cancer cells with low concentrations of the pigment derivatives and also studied the effects on the cell cycles.

Cyanidin and peonidin showed significant cell growth inhibition for the cancer cells, but there were no significant changes in the cell cycle. Lim said a better understanding of the underlying mechanisms in the Kansas-bred potato could provide scientific evidence of its health benefits.

Lim presented the research at the Experimental Biology Meeting in New Orleans in April. She is doing a follow-up study this summer that will involve treating animal cancer cells with the pigments.

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Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Lets get these products into the market asap. They have been grown in Mexico and in Indonesia and the Philippines forever, and could easily be introduced to the market here since the new varieties have been developed in temperate climates. What is the holdup on instant commercialization??? Other coloured potatoes are in vogue, so lets capitalize on it and bring the price of sweet potatoes down into the realm of the everyday shopper instead of treating them as a luxury item.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

There is a purple sweet potato that is grown at this time in NC only on contract for one company. I understand that it may be released for us to grow for our farmers markets in the next year or two. I am looking forward to having them available for our customers in the Knoxville area.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I work as executive chef for Cancer Treatment Centers of America, this is exactly the types of nutritional items I look for while preparing meals here in Goodyear Arizona. Are they available? I am in a constant search for natural foods that present and have specific effects on our bodies and fight cancer. Please help me to provide any of these magnificent helpful foods.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Okinawan sweet potatoes(purple fleshed)have been grown for decades. You can buy them on eBay. They are not very tasty. The traditional orange-fleshed varieties have anti-cancer properties but per capita consumption is only 4.2 pounds. No matter what the benefits of a vegetable or fruit (and there are many), it will not help if people do not consume them.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

WE ran across some purple-red sweet potatoes. i want to know if they are good for making pies other disesh. I have never seen them before

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I have been reserching the purple sweet potatoes (PSP) and I have found out that I can buy them at my local Asian food market. The markets have fresh and frozen pulp.
I have found the white skinned ones that have a ring of white just under the skin, and purple flesh. I have not found the purple skin/purple flesh ones around here.
I boiled a fresh one, peeled it and mashed it and put butter and a little salt on it and it tasted just like an orange sweet potato. I cooked some of the frozen pulp, and did not like the taste as well as the fresh one.
I found out that they are grown in California and Hawaii as well as in NC. I believe the purple skinned ones are grown in NC, and possibly the white skinned ones in Hawaii and California.
One company in Hawaii will ship you a 30 lb. box of the PSP.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I brought four purple sweet potatoes at the health store here in Pensacola fla. but was not sure how to eat them and wanted to know since I have the potatoe could I use one to grow more and how do I plant them? thanks for all information

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I feel the okinawan sweet potato is great. Here in Hawaii I have a friend that farms them and it’s a lot of work to harvest. They are great steamed and eaten with your meal as a starch. I have tried many types of desserts made with these sweet potatoes, and they are delicious!

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I have gotten purple sweet potatoes (inside and outside) from Back Yard Produce in Greensboro, NC. You can find them on the web at http://www.byproduce.com

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Lets get these products into the market asap. They have been grown in Mexico and in Indonesia and the Philippines forever, and could easily be introduced to the market here since the new varieties have been developed in temperate climates. What is the holdup on instant commercialization??? Other coloured potatoes are in vogue, so lets capitalize on it and bring the price of sweet potatoes down into the realm of the everyday shopper instead of treating them as a luxury item.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

There is a purple sweet potato that is grown at this time in NC only on contract for one company. I understand that it may be released for us to grow for our farmers markets in the next year or two. I am looking forward to having them available for our customers in the Knoxville area.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I work as executive chef for Cancer Treatment Centers of America, this is exactly the types of nutritional items I look for while preparing meals here in Goodyear Arizona. Are they available? I am in a constant search for natural foods that present and have specific effects on our bodies and fight cancer. Please help me to provide any of these magnificent helpful foods.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

Okinawan sweet potatoes(purple fleshed)have been grown for decades. You can buy them on eBay. They are not very tasty. The traditional orange-fleshed varieties have anti-cancer properties but per capita consumption is only 4.2 pounds. No matter what the benefits of a vegetable or fruit (and there are many), it will not help if people do not consume them.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

WE ran across some purple-red sweet potatoes. i want to know if they are good for making pies other disesh. I have never seen them before

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I have been reserching the purple sweet potatoes (PSP) and I have found out that I can buy them at my local Asian food market. The markets have fresh and frozen pulp.
I have found the white skinned ones that have a ring of white just under the skin, and purple flesh. I have not found the purple skin/purple flesh ones around here.
I boiled a fresh one, peeled it and mashed it and put butter and a little salt on it and it tasted just like an orange sweet potato. I cooked some of the frozen pulp, and did not like the taste as well as the fresh one.
I found out that they are grown in California and Hawaii as well as in NC. I believe the purple skinned ones are grown in NC, and possibly the white skinned ones in Hawaii and California.
One company in Hawaii will ship you a 30 lb. box of the PSP.

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I brought four purple sweet potatoes at the health store here in Pensacola fla. but was not sure how to eat them and wanted to know since I have the potatoe could I use one to grow more and how do I plant them? thanks for all information

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I feel the okinawan sweet potato is great. Here in Hawaii I have a friend that farms them and it’s a lot of work to harvest. They are great steamed and eaten with your meal as a starch. I have tried many types of desserts made with these sweet potatoes, and they are delicious!

Avatar for Anonymous Anonymous says:

I have gotten purple sweet potatoes (inside and outside) from Back Yard Produce in Greensboro, NC. You can find them on the web at http://www.byproduce.com

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