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What Watermelon
Can Do For You.
The latest research on watermelon
nutrition and health benefits will most likely surprise you.
It turns out that this tasty summer treat is good for you in
more ways than one! Check out the fun carvings you can do, the
great recipes, and the nutrition of this amazing fruit.
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Photo: Before analyzing it
in the lab, plant physiologist
Penelope Perkins-Veazie (right) and technician
Shelia Magby
examine a freshly sliced mini-watermelon. |
Watermelon Serves Up Medially Important Amino Acid
Lycopene Leader
Vitamins & Minerals
Watermelon History & Fun Facts
Watermelon Recipes & Storage & Choosing
Tips
Watermelon Carving & Instructions
Watermelon Serves Up Medically
Important Amino Acid
By Erin Peabody,
USDA
Nothing
says you care like the gift of a small watermelon. At least that's
the custom in China, where the offer of this red-fleshed cucurbit is
considered a fine way to please a gracious host or ill friend.
Now scientists with the Agricultural
Research Service (ARS) have found that there's far more to this
gastronomic gesture than just tradition and good taste. In addition
to containing plentiful amounts of the health-promoting antioxidant
lycopene, watermelon is an excellent source of the amino acid
citrulline.
And ARS researchers in Lane, Oklahoma,
and their collaborators have found that not only are watermelon's citrulline stores abundant--they're also readily usable. Their
findings are reported in the current issue of the journal
Nutrition. The human body uses citrulline to make another
important amino acid—arginine—which plays a key role in cell
division, wound healing and the removal of ammonia from the body.
ARS plant physiologist Penelope
Perkins-Veazie and nutritionist Julie Collins were interested in
finding out just how bioavailable watermelon's citrulline is, since
the fruit is one of few foods to contain high levels of it. Perkins-Veazie
works at the ARS South Central Agricultural Research Laboratory in
Lane, while Collins—previously based at the Lane laboratory—works at
Eastern Oklahoma State College in Wilburton. The two collaborated
with amino acid expert Guoyao Wu at Texas A&M University in College
Station.
After analyzing the arginine levels
of volunteers who'd recently consumed differing amounts of
concentrated watermelon juice, the scientists determined that
ingesting the juice increased the volunteers' levels of plasma
arginine—likely from conversion of citrulline.
Medical researchers are currently
evaluating arginine as a possible treatment for high blood pressure,
elevated glucose levels and the vascular complications associated
with sickle-cell disease. If such studies pan out, concentrated
forms of watermelon could represent an all-natural amino acid
source. The fruit's good-for-the-body lycopene is an added bonus.
Perkins-Veazie is now focused on finding an optimal way of
extracting citrulline from watermelon.
ARS is the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/pr/2007/070321.htm
Watermelon is the Lycopene Leader in
fresh produce, having higher concentrations of lycopene than any
other fresh fruit or vegetable. In fact, fresh watermelon contains
higher levels of lycopene than fresh tomatoes - a 2-cup serving of
watermelon contains and average of 18.16 mg and one medium-sized
tomato contains 4 mg.
Heart Healthy
Watermelon has heart healthy properties
because it is naturally low in saturated fat, total fat and
cholesterol.
A recent study by the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA) about watermelon consumption
and
heart healthy benefits was completed and published March 2007. The
NWPB has four new structure-function claims derived from this study:
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Watermelon consumption increases free
arginine and citrulline, which can help maintain cardiovascular
function.
-
Eating watermelon can help maintain
cardiovascular health.
-
Watermelon has amino acids such as
citrulline and arginine that help maintain the arteries.
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Watermelon amino acids citrulline and
arginine can help maintain blood flow and heart health.
Watermelon Is Practically A Multivitamin Unto
Itself
A 2-cup serving of watermelon is an excellent source of
Vitamins A, B6 and C.
Vitamin A found in watermelon is
important for optimal eye health.
Vitamin B6 found in watermelon is used
by the body to manufacture brain chemicals
(neurotransmitters), such as serotonin, melatonin and
dopamine, which preliminary research shows may help the body
cope with anxiety and panic.
Vitamin C in watermelons can help to
bolster your immune system's defenses against infections and
viruses and is known to stimulate the immune system and
protect against free radical damage.
Potassium
A two-cup serving of watermelon is also a source of
potassium*, a mineral necessary for water balance and found
inside of every cell. People with low potassium levels can
experience muscle cramps. A two-cup serving has less than 10
percent of the daily reference value for potassium.
All photos and text provided by the
National Watermelon Promotion Board.
For more information, recipes and ideas, please visit them at
http://www.watermelon.org