| Literature DB >> 20972369 |
Jaouad Bouayed1, Torsten Bohn2.
Abstract
The balance between oxidation and antioxidation is believed to be critical in maintaining healthy biological systems. Under physiological conditions, the human antioxidative defense system including e.g., superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), glutathione (GSH) and others, allows the elimination of excess reactive oxygen species (ROS) including, among others superoxide anions (O2(·-)), hydroxyl radicals (OH·), alkoxyl radicals (RO·) and peroxyradicals (ROO·). However, our endogenous antioxidant defense systems are incomplete without exogenous originating reducing compounds such as vitamin C, vitamin E, carotenoids and polyphenols, playing an essential role in many antioxidant mechanisms in living organisms. Therefore, there is continuous demand for exogenous antioxidants in order to prevent oxidative stress, representing a disequilibrium redox state in favor of oxidation. However, high doses of isolated compounds may be toxic, owing to prooxidative effects at high concentrations or their potential to react with beneficial concentrations of ROS normally present at physiological conditions that are required for optimal cellular functioning. This review aims to examine the double-edged effects of dietary originating antioxidants with a focus on the most abundant compounds, especially polyphenols, vitamin C, vitamin E and carotenoids. Different approaches to enrich our body with exogenous antioxidants such as via synthetic antioxidants, diets rich in fruits and vegetables and taking supplements will be reviewed and experimental and epidemiological evidences discussed, highlighting that antioxidants at physiological doses are generally safe, exhibiting interesting health beneficial effects.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidants; double-edged effects; fruits and vegetables; high doses; oxidative stress; physiological doses; reactive oxygen species; supplements
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20972369 PMCID: PMC2952083 DOI: 10.4161/oxim.3.4.12858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Human antioxidant defense systems include endogenous (enzymatic and non-enzymatic) and exogenous antioxidants, with the diet being the main exogenous source
| Antioxidant defense system | |
| Endogenous antioxidants | Exogenous antioxidants |
Superoxide dismutase (SOD): enzyme detoxifying superoxide radical (O2.-) Catalase (CAT) and glutathione peroxidase (GPx): enzymes involved in the detoxification of peroxides (CAT against H2O2, and GPx against both H2O2 and ROOH) Glutathione reductase: enzyme involved in the regeneration of glutathione Thioredoxin reductase: enzyme involved in the protection against protein oxidation Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase: enzyme involved in the regeneration of NADPH | |
and their glucosides.
Figure 1Double-edged effects of exogenous antioxidants on cellular responses including oxidative, nitrosative and dicarbonyl metabolisms and other pathways such as inflammatory processes depending potentially on their concentrations: physiologic doses leading to beneficial effects whereas high doses may result in harmful effects.
Compilation of data from epidemiological (retrospective and prospective) investigations and human intervention trials highlighting the role of the diet (fruits and vegetable, supplements) on human diseases or biomarkers of health
| Epidemiological and dietary intervention studies employing plant foods | References | Supplementation | References |
apple, reduced risk of lung cancer with higher dietary intake of β-carotene plant-based diet may prevent against several types of cancer including breast, prostate and colon cancers, based on comparisons between traditional eastern diets (e.g., Korea) rich in plant foods versus western diets (e.g., U.S, high intake of calories and fats and limited intake of plant foods). Changes in Korean dietary habits due to “westernization” of diet have increased incidence of cancer | Knekt et al. | no negative effects with respect to β-carotene supplementation (50 mg every other day) for 12 yrs in healthy subjects negative impact of supplementation by a combined treatment with vitamin A (retinyl palmitate) at 25,000 IU and β-carotene (30 mg) for 4 yrs on incidence of human lung cancer and cardiovascular diseases (CARET# study) negative impact of supplementation of β-carotene (20 mg/d) for 5–8 yrs on incidence of lung cancer (ATBC study)* vitamin E (50 mg/d) and β-carotene (20 mg/d) supplements for 6 yrs (median) failed to show beneficial effects on total stroke incidence or mortality in male smokers participating in the ATBC study (“Finish smoking study”). increased risk of fatal subarachnoid hemorrhage and intracerebral hemorrhage by vitamin E and beta-carotene supplements, respectively vitamin E (100 mg twice/d) and vitamin C (250 mg twice/d) supplements during two months failed to reduce oxidative DNA damage in smokers supplementation with vitamin C at 500 mg/kg over 6 weeks increased oxidative lymphocyte DNA damage of 30 healthy volunteers positive effects of long term supplementation of various minerals (Zn, Se), and β-carotene (15 mg), vitamin E (30 mg) on incidence on cancer in general (Linxian trial) | Reviewed by Goralczyk, |
| Reviewed by Peto et al. | #Beta-Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial | ||
| Reviewed by Lee et al. | *The Alpha-Tocopherol Beta Carotene Cancer Prevention Study Group | ||
protective effects of fruits and vegetables against coronary heart disease when consumed >4 servings/d for >8 years Meta-analysis of eight independent cohort prospective studies: Consumption of >5 servings/d of fruits and vegetables caused a stronger reduction in strokes (ischaemic and haemorrhagic stroke) compared to 3–5 servings, the latter consumption reducing stroke incidence significantly compared to <3 servings/d | Joshipura et al. | ||
| He et al. | Leppälä et al. | ||
decreased levels of oxidative DNA damage in healthy human volunteers consuming fruits and vegetables Adoption of traditional Mediterranean diets (moderate energy intake, limited animal fat and diversity and high intake of plant-based foods such as olive oil, cereals, legumes, nuts and vegetables), reduced several CvD risk factors in subjects at risk (primary prevention) and/or cardiovascular events/mortality in patients following a first cardiac event (secondary prevention) | Reviewed by Halliwell | Prieme et al. | |
| Podmore et al. | |||
| Reviewed by Lairon | Blot et al. |
Examples of antioxidant concentration in fruits, vegetables and in supplement preparations available on the market
| Dietary antioxidants | Rich dietary sources | Concentration in foods (mg/100 g) | Concentration in supplements |
| Vitamin C | bell pepper, citrus fruits | 10–170 | 100–1000 |
| Quercetin | apples, onions | 4–46 | 100–800 |
| Carotenoids | leafy vegetables, plums, tomatoes, watermelon, carrots | 0.2–10 | 5–15 |
| EGCG | green tea | 5–450 | 25–360 |
| Selenium | fish (dairy producs, potato, rice) | 1–150 | 0.07–0.20 |
| Vitamin E | fish, meat, leafy vegetables | 0.2–10 | 400 IU |
| Isoflavonoids | soy, beans, peanuts | 0.1–155 | 50–150 |
*µg/100 g
mg/cup (ca. 225 mL of tea beverage)
1 IU alpha tocopherol = 0.667 mg
internet data.