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Watermelon and Lycopene -- Why
You Need Them
Lycopene
is a red pigment found in plants and is part of a large class of
plant compounds called carotenoids. Carotenoids are fat soluble
and create yellow, orange or red colors in plants. Carotenoids are
not made by humans.
Lycopene is not found in high amounts in many plants. The greatest
sources of lycopene in fresh fruits and vegetables are watermelon,
tomato, red grapefruit and guava.
The red color found in strawberries, cherries, etc. is a water
soluble pigment called anthocyanin, and is formed by a very different
pathway from the carotenoids.
The primary role of carotenoids in plants is to neutralize compounds
created during photosynthesis. These compounds are often hydrogen
peroxide or singlet oxygen, both of which will attack and destroy
cell membranes, ultimately damaging the cell.
Singlet oxygen is oxygen with a higher energy charge because outer
orbital electrons are spinning in opposite directions. Humans breathe
in oxygen as O2. The biological processes in the body use oxygen
for reactions, frequently creating singlet oxygen as a byproduct.
The singlet oxygen is very reactive (high electric charge) and therefore
must be eliminated by the body before cell damage occurs.
The body uses antioxidants, compounds that look for singlet oxygen
and neutralizes it. Of the carotenoids, lycopene is the most effective
oxygen scavenger because it can neutralize several singlet oxygen
with one lycopene molecule. Other antioxidants are Vitamin C (ascorbic
acid) and Vitamin E.
More On Watermelons!
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