Ever notice a gritty film covering your teeth after eating a spinach
salad? This phenomenon, called "spinach tooth," happens because the
leafy greens are chock-full of oxalic acid.
This naturally occurring chemical is found in many plants, but spinach (Spinacia oleracea
L.) tends to have higher amounts of the substance compared with other
crops, said Jim Correll, a professor of plant pathology at the
University of Arkansas. Spinach likely uses the acid as a defense
mechanism against animals, such as insects, that try to eat it, he said.
Spinach is filled with other compounds,
too, including beta carotene (a precursor of vitamin A), lutein,
folate, vitamin C, iron, phosphorous, potassium and calcium — which is
also involved in spinach tooth, Correll said. [Does Washing Fruits and Vegetables Make Them Safe?]
"When you're chewing spinach, the oxalic acid combines with calcium,"
Correll told Live Science. A reaction between the two chemicals can lead
to the formation of calcium oxalate (CaOx), a crystal that doesn't
dissolve well in water, he said.
"It's almost like tiny crystals are floating around in your mouth, so
that's what gives it that unusual feeling and texture," explaining the
weird "spinach tooth" sensation, said Correll. Moreover, because calcium
oxalate crystals are nearly insoluble in water, they can end up in the
kidneys of people who are prone to kidney stones, he said.
Spinach
isn't the only food with high levels of oxalic acid. Beets, rhubarb,
strawberries, nuts, chocolate, tea, wheat bran and all dry beans, with
the exception of lima and green beans, "are known to increase oxalate in
the urine and may contribute to kidney stone formation," Correll and
his colleagues wrote in a July 2016 study on plant breeding published in
the journal Euphytica.
But a new breed of spinach might change everything. There are hundreds
of spinach varieties, some with twofold the amount of oxalic acid than
others, Correll said. So, he and his colleagues are trying to breed
together plants with lower levels of oxalic acid with the goal of making
a low-level oxalic acid spinach that can be enjoyed by everyone, he
said.
Because it's time-consuming to test oxalic acid levels in each spinach
plant, the researchers are looking for genetic markers that will clue
them in to which spinach plants would be the best to breed, he said.
As they breed new spinach plants,
the scientists will also have to monitor other factors, including taste
and whether a spinach plant with low levels of oxalic acid will be able
to defend itself against insects, he said. But if insects prevail,
farmers will likely turn to commercial agricultural methods to control
the pests, Correll said.
Until then, spinach lovers can boil or steam their spinach to help get
rid of the calcium oxalate. Or they can squeeze some lemon juice on top
of fresh spinach, as the ascorbic acid (vitamin C) in lemon juice will
help to dissolve the oxalic acid, he said.
"You're still ingesting the oxalic acid when you eat spinach [with lemon], but it tends to reduce that film you get on your teeth," Correll said.
SOURCE:
LiveScience




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