| Literature DB >> 25318054 |
Barbara Barbaro1, Gabriele Toietta2, Roberta Maggio3, Mario Arciello4, Mirko Tarocchi5, Andrea Galli6, Clara Balsano7.
Abstract
The use of the products derived from the olive tree on human health dates back centuries. In several civilizations, the olive tree had and still has a very strong cultural and religious symbolism. Notably, the official seal and emblem of the World Health Organization features the rod of Asclepius over a world map surrounded by olive tree branches, chosen as a symbol of peace and health. Recently, accumulating experimental, clinical and epidemiological data have provided support to the traditional beliefs of the beneficial effect provided by olive derivates. In particular, the polyphenols present in olive leaves, olives, virgin (unrefined) olive oil and olive mill waste are potent antioxidant and radical scavengers with anti-tumor and anti-inflammatory properties. Here, we review the positive impact on human health of oleuropein, the most prevalent polyphenol present in olives. In addition, we provide data collected in our laboratory on the role of oleuropein in counteracting lipid accumulation in a mouse model of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25318054 PMCID: PMC4227229 DOI: 10.3390/ijms151018508
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Oleuropein content range in different sources.
| Source | Oleuropein Content | References |
|---|---|---|
| Olive leaves | 93–134 mg/g (DW) | [ |
| 6.1–13.3 mg/g (DW) | [ | |
| 5.6–9.2 mg/g (DW) | [ | |
| 34.0–38.1 mg/g (FW) | [ | |
| 60–90 mg/g (DW) | [ | |
| 2.1–24.8 mg/g (DW) | [ | |
| Olive branches | 11–14 g/kg (DW) | [ |
| 18.9 g/kg (DW) | [ | |
| Olive roots | 1.9–6.0 g/kg (DW) | [ |
| Olive buds | 15.7–58.4 mg/g (FW) | [ |
| Olive flowers | 15.3–20.9 mg/g (FW) | [ |
| Olives (fruit) | 2.5–8.9 mg/g (FW) | [ |
| 0.6–1.1 mg/g (DW) | [ | |
| 13.6–50.8 mg/g (FW) | [ | |
| 0.4–21.7 mg/g (DW) | [ | |
| 1.3–5.8 mg/g (FW) | [ | |
| 0.3–3.5 mg/g (FW) | [ | |
| Table olives | 0.0–0.1 mg/g (DW) | [ |
| 0.0–0.5 mg/g (FW) | [ | |
| Virgin olive oil | 0.0–11.2 mg/kg | [ |
| 0.0–4.7 mg/kg | [ | |
| 2.0 mg/kg | [ | |
| 3.8 mg/kg | [ | |
| Olive oil | Virtually absent | [ |
| Olive pomace | 0.4 mg/g (DW) | [ |
| Olive mill waste water | 6.5 mg/g (DW) | [ |
| Absent | [ |
FW: fresh weight; DW: dry weight.
Oleuropein-induced anti-tumor effects in different cancer cell lines.
| Cell Line | Cancer Type | References |
|---|---|---|
| MCF-7 | Breast adenocarcinoma | [ |
| MDA | Breast adenocarcinoma | [ |
| T-47D | Breast ductal carcinoma | [ |
| HT 29 | Colorectal adenocarcinoma | [ |
| Caco-2 | Colorectal adenocarcinoma | [ |
| LoVo | Colorectal adenocarcinoma | [ |
| TF 1 | Erythroleukemia | [ |
| LN 18 | Glioblastoma | [ |
| A549 | Lung carcinoma | [ |
| RPMI 7951 | Melanoma | [ |
| LNCaP and DU145 | Prostate cancer | [ |
| 786-O | Renal cell adenocarcinoma | [ |
| T-24 | Urinary bladder carcinoma | [ |
Figure 1Oleuropein supplementation reduces hepatic lipid accumulation in high fat diet-treated mice. C57BL/6 mice were fed with a high fat diet (HFD) for eight weeks; then, animals were randomly divided into three groups of six mice each: the first received a normocaloric diet (ND), the second HFD, the third HFD supplemented with 3% oleuropein (HFD + Ole), for a further eight weeks. Mice were sacrificed, and histology was performed on sections of liver tissue, indicating reduced lipid deposition in the HFD + Ole group. Hematoxylin and eosin stain; original magnification: 40×. All experimental procedures conformed to protocols approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (178/2013 B, on 16 July 2013) and were performed according to the Guidelines of the Italian National Institutes of Health.
Figure 2Oleuropein supplementation reduces body, liver and heart weights in high fat diet-treated mice. C57BL/6 mice were fed with a high fat diet (HFD) for eight weeks; then, animals were randomly divided into three groups: the first received a normocaloric diet (ND), the second high fat diet (HFD), the third HFD supplemented with 3% oleuropein (HFD + Ole) for further eight weeks. At the end of treatment, HFD + Ole mice had reduced weight gain (total body—25%, liver—50%, heart—70%) compared to HFD-fed mice. Data are expressed as the mean; error bars indicate the standard error; number of animals per group = 6. An asterisk denotes a statistically significant difference between HFD and HFD + Ole groups (p < 0.05 assessed with a two-tailed Student’s t-test for unpaired data).
Biological activities and effect(s) of oleuropein.
| Activity | Effect(s) | References |
|---|---|---|
| Antioxidant | Improvement of radical stability | [ |
| ROS scavenging effect | [ | |
| Inhibition of oxidation of LDL | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory | Inhibition of synthesis of pro-inflammatory cytokines | [ |
| Lipoxygenase inhibition | [ | |
| Anti-tumor | ROS scavenging effect | [ |
| Antiproliferative effect | [ | |
| Apoptosis induction | [ | |
| Anti-migration effect | [ | |
| Angiogenesis inhibition | [ | |
| Hepatoprotective | Steatosis reduction | [ |
| Oxidative stress reduction | [ | |
| Antimicrobial | Bacterial cell membrane damage | [ |
| Antiviral | Viral integrase inhibition | [ |
| Viral envelope interaction | [ | |
| Neuroprotective | Oxidative stress reduction | [ |
| Tau fibrillization inhibition | [ |