Literature DB >> 25436473

Chemoprevention against arsenic-induced mutagenic DNA breakage and apoptotic liver damage in rat via antioxidant and SOD1 upregulation by green tea (Camellia sinensis) which recovers broken DNA resulted from arsenic-H2O2 related in vitro oxidant stress.

Nirmallya Acharyya1, Sandip Chattopadhyay, Smarajit Maiti.   

Abstract

Green tea (Camellia sinensis; CS) strongly reverses/prevents arsenic-induced apoptotic hepatic degeneration/micronecrosis and mutagenic DNA damage in in vitro oxidant stress model and in rat as shown by comet assay and histoarchitecture (HE and PAS staining) results. Earlier, we demonstrated a link between carcinogenesis and impaired antioxidant system-associated mutagenic DNA damage in arsenic-exposed human. In this study, arsenic-induced (0.6 ppm/100 g body weight/day for 28 days) impairment of cytosolic superoxide-dismutase (SOD1), catalase, xanthine-oxidase, thiol, and urate activities/levels led to increase in tissue levels of damaging malondialdehyde, conjugated dienes, serum necrotic-marker lactate-dehydrogenase, and metabolic inflammatory-marker c-reactive protein suggesting dysregulation at the transcriptional/signal-transduction level. These are decisively restrained by CS-extract (≥10 mg/ml aqueous) with a restoration of DNA/tissue structure. The structural/functional impairment of dialyzed and centrifugally concentrated (6-8 kd cutoff) hepatic SOD1 via its important Cys modifications by H2O2/arsenite redox-stress and that protection by CS/2-mercaptoethanol are shown in in vitro/in situ studies paralleling the present Swiss-Model-generated rSOD1 structural data. Here, arsenite(3+) incubation (≥10(-8) μM + 10 mM H2O2, 2 hr) is shown for the first time with this low-concentration to initiate breakage in rat hepatic-DNA in vitro whereas, arsenite/H2O2/UV-radiation does not affect DNA separately. Arsenic initiates Fe and Cu ion-associated free-radical reaction cascade in vivo. Here, 10 μM of Cu(2+)/Fe(3+)/As(3+) +H2O2-induced in vitro DNA fragmentation is prevented by CS (≥1 mg/ml), greater than the prevention of ascorbate or tocopherol or DMSO or their combination. Moreover, CS incubation for various time with differentially and already degraded DNA resulted from pre-incubation in 10 μM As(3+)-H2O2 system markedly recovers broken DNA. Present results decisively suggest for the first time that CS and its mixed polyphenols have potent SOD1 protecting, diverse radical-scavenging and antimutagenic activities furthering to DNA protection/therapy in arsenic-induced tissue necrosis/apoptosis.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Camellia sinensis; DNA breakage; arsenic and antioxidant systems; chemoprevention; cytosolic or Cu-Zn SOD (SOD1); green tea; hepatic carcinogenesis

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25436473     DOI: 10.1080/10590501.2014.967061

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Environ Sci Health C Environ Carcinog Ecotoxicol Rev        ISSN: 1059-0501            Impact factor:   3.781


  10 in total

1.  Oxidant stress induction and signalling in xenografted (human breast cancer-tissues) plus estradiol treated or N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea treated female rats via altered estrogen sulfotransferase (rSULT1E1) expressions and SOD1/catalase regulations.

Authors:  Aarifa Nazmeen; Smarajit Maiti
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2018-10-12       Impact factor: 2.316

Review 2.  Therapeutic properties of green tea against environmental insults.

Authors:  Lixia Chen; Huanbiao Mo; Ling Zhao; Weimin Gao; Shu Wang; Meghan M Cromie; Chuanwen Lu; Jia-Sheng Wang; Chwan-Li Shen
Journal:  J Nutr Biochem       Date:  2016-05-27       Impact factor: 6.048

3.  Therapeutic effects of CoenzymeQ10, Biochanin A and Phloretin against arsenic and chromium induced oxidative stress in mouse (Mus musculus) brain.

Authors:  Swapnil Tripathi; Shabrin Fhatima; Dharati Parmar; Dhirendra Pratap Singh; SukhDev Mishra; Rajeev Mishra; Gyanendra Singh
Journal:  3 Biotech       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 2.893

4.  The role of Dermcidin isoform-2 in the occurrence and severity of Diabetes.

Authors:  Suman Bhattacharya; Md Mobidullah Khan; Chandradipa Ghosh; Sarbashri Bank; Smarajit Maiti
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2017-08-15       Impact factor: 4.379

Review 5.  Genome-Protecting Compounds as Potential Geroprotectors.

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Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-06-24       Impact factor: 5.923

6.  Medicinal plants and natural products in amelioration of arsenic toxicity: a short review.

Authors:  Sanjib Bhattacharya
Journal:  Pharm Biol       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 3.503

7.  Effects of theaflavin-gallate in-silico binding with different proteins of SARS-CoV-2 and host inflammation and vasoregulations referring an experimental rat-lung injury.

Authors:  Smarajit Maiti; Amrita Banerjee; Mehak Kanwar
Journal:  Phytomed Plus       Date:  2022-02-08

Review 8.  Natural Dietary Compounds in the Treatment of Arsenic Toxicity.

Authors:  Geir Bjørklund; Md Shiblur Rahaman; Mariia Shanaida; Roman Lysiuk; Petro Oliynyk; Larysa Lenchyk; Salvatore Chirumbolo; Christos T Chasapis; Massimiliano Peana
Journal:  Molecules       Date:  2022-07-29       Impact factor: 4.927

9.  Breast cancer pathogenesis is linked to the intra-tumoral estrogen sulfotransferase (hSULT1E1) expressions regulated by cellular redox dependent Nrf-2/NFκβ interplay.

Authors:  Aarifa Nazmeen; Guangping Chen; Tamal Kanti Ghosh; Smarajit Maiti
Journal:  Cancer Cell Int       Date:  2020-03-04       Impact factor: 5.722

10.  Epigallocatechin gallate and theaflavin gallate interaction in SARS-CoV-2 spike-protein central channel with reference to the hydroxychloroquine interaction: Bioinformatics and molecular docking study.

Authors:  Smarajit Maiti; Amrita Banerjee
Journal:  Drug Dev Res       Date:  2020-08-07       Impact factor: 5.004

  10 in total

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