| Literature DB >> 22499188 |
Omotayo O Erejuwa1, Siti A Sulaiman, Mohd S Ab Wahab.
Abstract
The global prevalence of chronic diseases such as diabetes mellitus, hypertension, atherosclerosis, cancer and Alzheimer's disease is on the rise. These diseases, which constitute the major causes of death globally, are associated with oxidative stress. Oxidative stress is defined as an "imbalance between oxidants and antioxidants in favor of the oxidants, potentially leading to damage". Individuals with chronic diseases are more susceptible to oxidative stress and damage because they have elevated levels of oxidants and/or reduced antioxidants. This, therefore, necessitates supplementation with antioxidants so as to delay, prevent or remove oxidative damage. Honey is a natural substance with many medicinal effects such as antibacterial, hepatoprotective, hypoglycemic, reproductive, antihypertensive and antioxidant effects. This review presents findings that indicate honey may ameliorate oxidative stress in the gastrointestinal tract (GIT), liver, pancreas, kidney, reproductive organs and plasma/serum. Besides, the review highlights data that demonstrate the synergistic antioxidant effect of honey and antidiabetic drugs in the pancreas, kidney and serum of diabetic rats. These data suggest that honey, administered alone or in combination with conventional therapy, might be a novel antioxidant in the management of chronic diseases commonly associated with oxidative stress. In view of the fact that the majority of these data emanate from animal studies, there is an urgent need to investigate this antioxidant effect of honey in human subjects with chronic or degenerative diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22499188 PMCID: PMC6268297 DOI: 10.3390/molecules17044400
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Molecular structures of fructose and oligosaccharides present in honey.
Figure 2Molecular structures of some of the organic acids, flavonoids and phenolic compounds present in honey.
Summary of the antioxidant effects of honey in different tissues.
| Tissue/Study design | Oxidative stress status | Ref. | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control | Honey | ||
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| Rats with TNBS-induced colitis | ↑ MDA; ↑ MPO; ↓ SOD; ↓ CAT; ↓ GPx and ↓ GSH | ↓ MDA; ↓ MPO; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↑ GPx and ↑ GSH | |
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| Rats or mice with trichlorfon-, NEM- or CCl4-induced liver injury or obstructive jaundice | ↑ GPx; ↑ CAT; ↓ GSH; ↑ MDA and TAC | ↓ GPx; ↓ CAT; ↑ GSH; ↓ MDA and TAC | |
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| Rats with STZ-induced diabetes | ↑ SOD; ↑ GPx; ↓ CAT and ↑ MDA | ↓ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↓ GPx and ↓ MDA | |
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| Rats with STZ-induced diabetes (diabetic SD) or with CCl4-induced nephrotoxicity | ↑ MDA; ↓ TAS; ↓ CAT; ↓ GPx; ↓ GST; ↓ GR; ↑ SOD and ↓ GSH | ↓ MDA; ↑TAS; ↑ CAT; ↑ GPx; ↑ GST; ↑ GR; ↓ SOD and ↑ GSH | |
| Rats with hypertension (SHR) | ↑ MDA; ↑ GST; ↑ TAS and ↑ CAT | ↓ MDA; ↓ GST; ↓ TAS and ↓ CAT | |
| Rats with diabetes (diabetic WKY) | ↔ MDA; ↔ CAT; ↑ GPx; ↔ GR; ↓ TAS and ↔ GSH/GSSG | ↔ MDA; ↔ CAT; ↔ TAS; ↓ GPx; ↓ GR and ↑ GSH/GSSG | |
| Rats with both diabetes and hypertension (diabetic SHR) | ↔ MDA; ↓ CAT; ↓ GPx; ↓ GR; ↓ TAS; ↔ GSH and ↔ GSH/GSSG | ↔ MDA; ↔ CAT; ↑ GPx; ↑ GR; ↑ TAS; ↑ GSH and ↑ GSH/GSSG | |
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| MNU-induced oxidative stress | ↑ MDA and ↑ NO | ↓ MDA and ↑ NO | |
| Alloxan- or STZ-induced diabetic rats or non-diabetic rats | ↓ GPx; ↓ NO and ↑ formation of glycated products (fructosamine and glycated hemoglobin) | ↑ GPx; ↑ NO; ↑ TAS and ↓glycated products (fructosamine and glycated hemoglobin) | |
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| Testis of rats exposed to cigarette smoke | ↑ MDA; ↓ TAS; ↓ SOD; ↓ CAT and ↑ GPx | ↓ MDA; ↓ GPx; ↑ TAS; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT and ↑ GSH | |
| Seminal oxidative stress in male cyclists undergoing intensive cycling training | ↓ TAS; ↓ SOD and ↓ CAT | ↓ MDA; ↓ ROS; ↑ SOD, ↑ CAT and ↑ TAS | |
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| Whole blood and erythrocytes of young (2 months) and middle-aged (9 months) rats | Whole blood: ↑ DNA damage; Erythrocytes: ↓ GPx and ↑ CAT | ↓ DNA damage ↑ GPx and ↓ CAT | |
| In a cultured endothelial cell line | ↑ ROS and ↓ GSH | ↓ ROS and ↑ GSH | |
| In inflammation | ↑ NO and ↑ prostaglandin E(2) | ↓ NO; ↓ prostaglandin E(2) and ↓ inflammation | |
TNBS, trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid; MPO, myeloperoxidase; NEM, N-ethylmaleimide; TAC or TAS, total antioxidant capacity or status; 8-IP, 8-isoprostane; SOD, superoxide dismutase; CAT, catalase; GPx, glutathione peroxidase; GR, glutathione reductase; glutathione S-transferase; NO, nitric oxide; ROS, reactive oxygen species; GSH, reduced glutathione; GSSG, oxidized glutathione; MDA, malondialdehyde; ↑ = increased/enhanced; ↓ = reduced/attenuated; ↔ = no significant effect.