| Literature DB >> 27478535 |
Anouk Kaulmann1, Torsten Bohn2.
Abstract
Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs) are characterized by autoimmune and inflammation-related complications of the large intestine (ulcerative colitis) and additional parts of the digestive tract (Crohn's disease). Complications include pain, diarrhoea, chronic inflammation, and cancer. IBD prevalence has increased during the past decades, especially in Westernized countries, being as high as 1%. As prognosis is poor and medication often ineffective or causing side effects, additional preventive/adjuvant strategies are sought. A possible approach is via diets rich in protective constituents. Polyphenols, the most abundant phytochemicals, have been associated with anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, immunomodulatory, and apoptotic properties. Locally reducing oxidative stress, they can further act on cellular targets, altering gene expression related to inflammation, including NF-κB, Nrf-2, Jak/STAT, and MAPKs, suppressing downstream cytokine formation (e.g., IL-8, IL-1β, and TNF-α), and boosting the bodies' own antioxidant status (HO-1, SOD, and GPx). Moreover, they may promote, as prebiotics, healthy microbiota (e.g., Bifidobacteria, Akkermansia), short-chain fatty acid formation, and reduced gut permeability/improved tight junction stability. However, potential adverse effects such as acting as prooxidants, or perturbations of efflux transporters and phase I/II metabolizing enzymes, with increased uptake of undesired xenobiotics, should also be considered. In this review, we summarize current knowledge around preventive and arbitrary actions of polyphenols targeting IBD.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27478535 PMCID: PMC4958438 DOI: 10.1155/2016/9346470
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Factors involved in the origin and progression of IBD, via inflammation and oxidative stress. For abbreviations see footnote of Table 3.
Figure 2Summary of mechanisms via which polyphenols may positively or negatively influence the development of IBD. For abbreviations see footnote of Table 3.
Overview of major risk factors and suggested mechanisms involved in the development of IBD.
| Risk factor | Influence: positive (+), negative (−) | Mechanism | Reference |
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| Genetic predisposition | +/− | Genes involved in inflammation and oxidative stress responses and in immune function (histocompatibility complex) | [ |
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| Smoking | − | Altered blood flow, enhanced cytokine formation, immunomodulatory, influencing mucus production | [ |
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| Air pollution (NOx, SO2…) | − | Unclear: proinflammatory response to air particles? | [ |
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| Enhanced hygiene | − | Unclear: reduced exposure early in life to microorganisms. Reduced IBD prevalence found for growing up on farms, living in crowded homes, consuming unpasteurized milk | [ |
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| Microbiota | +/− | Immunomodulatory properties, production of anti-inflammatory compounds. Some bacteria strains associated with negative effects (e.g., Clostridia), others with positive effects, such as Bifidobacteria, possibly due to enhanced gut barrier properties, production of SCFA | [ |
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| Diet, probiotics | + | Immunomodulatory properties, production of anti-inflammatory compounds, see microbiota | [ |
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| Diet, prebiotics (fiber) | + | Favouring healthy microbiota (Bifidobacteria…), production of anti-inflammatory SCFA, lowering of pH | [ |
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| Diet, vitamin D | + | Immunomodulatory, protection of barrier | [ |
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| Diet, dietary fiber | + | Production of anti-inflammatory SCFA, increasing fecal bulk and lowering concentration of compounds with adverse effects | [ |
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| Diet, vitamins C, E | +/− | Unclear: antioxidants may reduce ROS parameters, normalize abnormally low tissue levels in subjects with IBD | [ |
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| Diet, PUFAs ( | + | Anti-inflammatory effects | [ |
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| Diet, polyphenols | + | Antioxidant effects (reducing ROS), anti-inflammatory properties, altering genetic expression via NF- | [ |
PUFAs: polyunsaturated fatty acids, ROS: reactive oxygen species, and SCFA: short-chain fatty acids.
Selected food items rich in various polyphenol classes, including potential health beneficial effects.
| Food item | Edible part | Concentration (mg/100 g) | Major polyphenol (classes) | Reference regarding content | Suggested health effects, selection§ | Reference regarding health effect |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apples | Peel | 50–120$ | Phlorizin, phenolic acids: chlorogenic acid, quercetin | [ | Blood glucose lowering, anti-inflammatory, lowering colonic inflammation | [ |
| Flesh | 0.2–0.9 | |||||
| Total | ca. 5–50 | |||||
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| Blackberries | Whole | 130–405 | Anthocyanins, flavanols: EC, phenolic acid: ellagic acid | Phenol explorer1 | Anti-inflammatory, anti-IBD | [ |
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| Blueberries, highbush | Whole | 160–480 | Anthocyanins, flavonols: quercetin, phenolic acids: chlorogenic acid | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory, anti-IBD | [ |
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| Cacao | Bean, powder | 300–1100 | Flavanols: EC | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory, against heart failure | [ |
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| Chestnut, raw | Whole nut | 547–1960 | Hydroxybenzoic acids: gallic acid, ellagic acid, tannins | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
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| Chocolate | Dark | 150–425 | Flavanols: epicatechin, hydroxycinnamic acid: ferulic acid | Phenol explorer | Reducing CVD, anti-inflammatory | [ |
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| Cloves | Seasoning, dried | 1200–17500 | Hydroxyhenylpropenes: eugenol, acetyl eugenol | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory, antiulcer | [ |
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| Coffee | Beverage, filtered | 90 | Phenolic acids: chlorogenic acid | Phenol explorer | Improved blood lipids, improved glucose handling, anti-inflammatory but increases IBD symptoms | [ |
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| Curcuma | Spice, whole | 200+ | Curcuminoids, flavonoids, phenolic acids | [ | Anti-IBD, anticancerogenic, anti-inflammatory | [ |
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| Grapefruit | Flesh | 15–115 | Flavonoids, phenolic acids | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
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| Green tea | Drinkable extract | 29–103 | Flavanols: EC, EGCG | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory, anticolitic | [ |
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| Olive oil, extra virgin | Whole oil | 4–200 | Tyrosols, lignans: pinoresinol; phenolic acids, hydrolysable tannins | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory, reducing CVD | [ |
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| Paprika, green | Whole fruit | 0.3–10 | Flavonoids: luteolin glucosides; hydroxycinnamic acids | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
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| Peppermint | Seasoning, dried | 450–26000 | Flavonoids: eriocitrin; hydroxycinnamic acids: rosmarinic acid | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
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| Pomegranate | Juice | 240 | Punicalagin (an ellagitannin) | [ | Anti-inflammatory, anti-IBD | [ |
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| Potato | Peel | 180–5000#
| Phenolic acids: chlorogenic acid | [ | Glycoalkaloids may increase IBD, anthocyanins anti-inflammatory effects in colored potatoes | [ |
| Total | 10–50 | Phenol explorer | ||||
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| Plum, dark | Total | 130–240 | Phenolic acids: chlorogenic acid; procyanidins, anthocyanins | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant | [ |
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| Red wine | Final product | 25–300 | Phenolic acids, anthocyanins, tannins, stilbenes (resveratrol) | Phenol explorer | Improved blood lipids, anti-inflammatory, anti-IBD | [ |
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| Soy | Flour | 140–900 | Isoflavonoids: daidzein, glycitein, genistein, & glucosides | Phenol explorer | Improved blood lipids, antiapoptotic effects, anti-inflammatory, anti-IBD | [ |
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| Spinach | Leaf | 30–290 | Flavonols | Phenol explorer | Anti-inflammatory, anti-IBD | [ |
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| Wheat | Whole grain | 85–220 | Phenolic acids: hydroxybenzoic acids, hydroxycinnamic acids | Phenol explorer | Unclear, enhancing celiac disease, controversial effects | [ |
In juices and wine: mg/100 mL; 1 http://phenol-explorer.eu/; #calculated from dry weight assuming 80% water content. Note that content in purple potatoes is ca. 5 times higher in polyphenol content than other varieties; $concentration in mg/cm2, CVD = cardiovascular diseases, EC = epicatechin, and EPGC = epigallocatechin; +total polyphenols with Folin-Ciocalteu; §effect refers to observation with whole food or respective extracts but is attributed—at least in part—to the respective polyphenols.
Human intervention trials suggesting health benefits of polyphenol intake with respect to IBD—an overview.
| Aspects studied | Dosing and time | Effects found | Mechanism proposed and critics | Reference |
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| Effect of curcumin on CD patients in a RCT study | 89 patients with UC, 45 given 2 g curcumin/d for 6 months | Curcumin improved both clinical activity index & endoscopic index | Curcumin suppressed morbidity associated with UC | [ |
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| Effect of different dietary interventions, prospective trial | 22 CD subjects receiving semivegetarian versus omnivorous diet for 2 y | Semivegetarian diet more successful in maintaining remission over 2 y versus omnivorous diet (94 versus 33%) | Effects of fiber & polyphenols? | [ |
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| Effect of cacao drink on gut bacteria | 22 healthy adults receiving 494 mg or ( | Significant reductions in plasma TG & CRP in group receiving high flavonol drink | Flavonol rich drink sign. increased Bifidobacteria & Lactobacilli populations, sign. decreasing Clostridia counts | [ |
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| Effect of pycnogenol in subjects with CD | 15 children with CD receiving 2 mg/kg bw. for 12 weeks. 15 control children with no intervention | Compared to baseline, improved lipoperoxides, improved SOD, reduced AOPP | Oxidative stress related markers improved following PP consumption | [ |
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| Effect of red wine consumption on plasma LPS & gut bacteria | 10 volunteers, 20 d, 272 mL of red wine (RW) with/without alcohol (DRW), or 100 mL gin | No significant differences in the change in LPS or LBP conc. between chronic RW, DRW, & gin consumption |
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| Effect of blueberry beverage (bb) on healthy subjects | 20 subjects, either consuming bb (375 mg ACNs & 128 mg CA) for 6 weeks versus placebo | Bb enhanced Bifidobacteria counts compared to placebo | Prebiotic effect of polyphenols | [ |
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| Effect of apple products on inflammation & gut microbiota | 5 × 4 weeks crossover, whole apples (550 g/d), apple pomace (22 g/d), clear & cloudy apple juices (500 mL/d), none, | No effect on HDL-cholesterol, TAG, weight, waist-to-hip ratio, blood pressure, CRP, gut microbiota, insulin, IGF1, lower serum LDL for whole apples & pomace | Too high variation of bacterial changes such as Bifidobacteria, already health subjects, too short intervention period? | [ |
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| Effect of red wine on fecal markers of inflammation | 34 healthy subjects drinking RW (1.76 g/L PP) for 4 weeks | In a subgroup of 6 subjects, TNF- | Reduced inflammation via NF- | [ |
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| Effect of red wine PP on gut bacteria of obese subjects | 10 obese & 10 normal subjects receiving 272 mL RW over 30 d | PP sign. increased fecal Bifidobacteria & Lactobacillus & butyrate producers ( | Intestinal barrier protection & SCFA production | [ |
ACNs: anthocyanins; AMPK: adenosine monophosphate kinase; AOPP: advanced oxidation protein end-products; Bcl-xl: B-cell lymphoma-extra large; bcrp: breast cancer cell resistance protein; bw: body weight; CA: chlorogenic acid; CAT: catalase; ccl2: chemokine (C-C motif) ligand 2; CINC1: cytokine-induced neutrophil chemoattractant-1; CYP1A1: cytochrome P450, family 1, member 1A1; CD: Crohn's disease; COX-2: cyclooxygenase 2; CRP: c-reactive protein; CXCL1: chemokine (C-X-C motif) ligand, neutrophil activating; DAI: disease activity index; DSS: dextran sodium sulphate; DRW: dealcoholized wine; EA: ellagic acid; EGCG: epigallocatechin gallate; EP: evening primrose (Oenothera paradoxa) pomace; GAE: gallic acid equivalents; GM-CSF: granulocyte macrophage colony stimulating factor; FRAP: ferric reducing antioxidant power assay; GR: glutathione reductase; Gred: reduced glutathione; GrTP: green tea extract; GPx: glutathione peroxidase; GSH: glutathione (reduced); GSP: grape seed polyphenols; GSTT2: glutathione-S-transferase theta 2; ICAM: Intercellular adhesion molecule 1; IFN: interferon; IL: interleukin; iNOS: inducible nitric oxide synthase; LBP: LPS binding protein; LPS: lipopolysaccharides; Mcp-1: monocyte chemoattractant protein-1; Mdr1a (−/−): multidrug resistance targeted mutation; MDA: malondialdehyde; MPO: myeloperoxidase; MIP2: macrophage inflammatory protein 2; MRP: multidrug resistance protein; OHdG: 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine; NF-κB: nuclear factor kappa B; Nrf-2: nuclear factor (erythroid-derived 2)-like 2; NQO1: NAD(P)H dehydrogenase [quinone-1] 1; PCAM-1: platelet endothelial cell adhesion molecule; PGE2: prostaglandin-E2; P-gp: P-glycoprotein; PP: polyphenols; PRDX-6: peroxiredoxin-6; PPAR: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor; RCT: randomized control trial; RW: red wine; SAA: serum amyloid α; SAPK: stress activated protein kinase; SCFAs: short chain fatty acids; SOD: superoxide dismutase; STAT1: signal transducer and activator of transcription 1; TAC: total antioxidant capacity; TBNS: 2,4,6-trinitrobenzenesulfonic acid; TBARS: thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; TG: triglycerides; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor alpha; TXNRD-1: thioredoxin reductase-1; UGT1A1: UDP-glucuronosyltransferase family 1 member A1; UTR: untranslated; VCAM-1: vascular cell adhesion protein 1; WB: Western blot.
Animal trials suggesting positive health benefits of polyphenols with respect to IBD—an overview.
| Aspects studied | Dosing and time | Effects found | Mechanism proposed and critics | Reference |
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| Effect of green tea PP on DSS induced colitis in IL-2 deficient mice | Water with 5 g/L green tea PP for 6 weeks | Reduced serum amyloid A, increased weight gain & hematocrit, reduced IFN- | Anti-inflammatory effects of green tea PP | [ |
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| Effect of green tea PP & other antioxidants on DSS induced colitis in mice | 10 d, no dose specified | Lengthening of colon, enhanced blood level of reduced GSH, improved serum amyloid A, TNF- | Improved antioxidant status | [ |
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| Effect of ellagic acid (EA) on rats with TBNS induced colitis | 10-11 rats per group receiving 10–20 mg/kg EA for 10 d | EA decreased neutrophil infiltration & COX-2 & iNOS. Reduced activation of p38, JNK & ERK1/2 MAPKs, preventing inhibitory protein I | EA diminished severity & extension of intestinal injuries. EA also increased mucus production in goblet cells in colon mucosa | [ |
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| Effect of strawberry PP on rats with induced gastric lesions | 40 mg/kg with various strawberries or quercetin (100 mg/kg) for 10 d (equiv. to 0.5 kg for 70 kg adult) | Reduced MDA, enhanced SOD & in part CAT in gastric mucosa. | Antioxidant enzyme activities increased with strawberry extract, decreased gastric lipid peroxidation. Sign. correlation between total anthocyanin content & % inhibition of ulcer | [ |
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| Effect of apple PP (APP) on mice with induced colitis | APP at 1% added to drinking water (90% tannins) for up to 4 weeks | APP administration dampened mRNA expression of IL-1 | APP-mediated protection required T cells. Giving APP during colitis to T-cell receptor (−/−) mice enhanced proinflammatory cytokine expression, showing need for TCR | [ |
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| Effect of ellagic acid (EA) & enriched pomegranate extract (PE) in TBNS induced rats | 6 weeks with either 250 or 500 mg/kg PE, or 10 mg/kg EA, or both together | MPO activity & TNF- | PE & EA-enriched PE diets decreased COX-2 & iNOS expression, reduced MAPK phosphorylation & prevented NF- | [ |
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| Effect of EGCG & | 6.9 mg/kg bw. EGCG or | Combination of EGCG & piperine sign. reduced loss of bw., improved clinical course, & increased overall survival | Attenuated colitis was associated with reduced histological damage to colon & reduction of tissue concentrations of MDA. Neutrophil accumulation indicator MPO was reduced in the colon; SOD & GPx were increased | [ |
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| Effect of green tea PP on DSS induced colitis in IL-10 deficient mice | Green tea PP or EGCG at 0.25, 0.5, & 1% added to diet for 10 weeks | Low dose improved histopathology; all doses improved antioxidant levels (colonic & hepatic GSH), reduction of circulating TNF- | Antioxidant activities of polyphenols | [ |
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| Effect of grape juice on rats with TBNS induced colitis | 1 or 2% grape juice in diet for up to 9 d | 1% grape juice improved clinical symptoms of colitis: reduced intensity of macroscopic & histological scores | Sig. differences of TNF- | [ |
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| Effect of oligonol (lychee PP) on mice with DSS induced colitis | 0.5 or 5 mg/kg/d for 2 weeks | Oligonol sign. inhibited activation of NF- | Various anti-inflammatory genes involved, as well as effects on antioxidant status | [ |
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| Effects of |
| Both extracts reduced colonic MPO activity, increased colonic GSH, & downregulated iNOS expression. Only | Anti-inflammatory aspects of both extracts. Implication of NF- | [ |
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| Effect of green tea PP on Mdr1a(−/−) mice on proteomic & transcriptomic endpoints | 0.6% in the diet for 12 weeks | Improved histopathology, reduced abundance of transcripts & proteins associated with immune & inflammatory response/fibrinogenesis, increased abundance of pathways associated with xenobiotic metabolism in response to GrTP | Anti-inflammatory activity mediated by multiple molecular pathways. PPAR- | [ |
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| Effect of naringenin on DSS induced colitis mice | 0.3% naringenin in diet for up to 9 d | Naringenin attenuated the increased DAI & colon shortening & suppressed the increased cytokine (IL-17A, IL-1 | Anti-inflammatory properties of naringenin & barrier protection | [ |
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| Effect of grape seed & marc extract (GSME) on healthy pigs | GSME at 1% added to diet in 6 pigs versus 6 control pigs for 4 weeks | Lower expression of NF- | Pigs fed GSME diet had lower NF- | [ |
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| Effect of catechin on rats receiving ketoprofen | Catechin (35 mg/kg/d) for 21 d | Catechin inhibited oxidative damage & reversed impairment of antioxidant system (GSH, LDH-leakage, 8-OHdG) in intestinal mucosa | ROS reduction by polyphenols | [ |
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| 7 d, no PP conc. of passion fruit stated. 25 g passion fruit flour/kg diet given | Improved serum FRAP, GPx, TBARS, GR, decreased colon lipid peroxidation, decreased no. of aerobic bacteria & Enterobacteria, improved acetic & butyric acid levels in feces, higher no. of Bifidobacteria & Lactobacilli | Improved antioxidant status, improved gut flora | [ |
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| Effect of PP rich evening primrose pomace (EP) extract on TBNS induced colitis in mice | 10 mg/kg of 612 mg/g PP extract per dry basis, for 3 d | Improved histopathology & MPO, reduced tissue hydrogen peroxide levels, no effect on IL-1 | Reduced ROS via antioxidant activity | [ |
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| PP-rich sorghum bran given to rats with DSS induced colitis | 6% fiber diet given over 21 d | Diet significantly affected | Protection via improving microbial diversity & richness & dysbiosis of Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes | [ |
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| Effect of grape seed PP in IL-10 deficient mice | 16 weeks of exposure with 1% GSP of dry food weight | Improved histopathology, reduced pore forming claudin-2 protein, & increased barrier forming claudin-1 protein expression | Reduced expression of NF- | [ |
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| Effects of grape seed PP (GSP) in DSS induced colitis in rats | 21 d, 1.15 mg/g PP in diet | Reduced lesions (histological score) & disease activity index, reduced cytokines (IL-13, TNF- | Upregulation of various genes implicated in colitis such as intercellular adhesion molecule 1 (ICAM-1) & matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) | [ |
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| Effects of gallic acid on induced colitis in mice | 10 mg/kg for 7 d together with DSS | Improved histology scores, reduced TNF- | Reduced expression of p-STAT3, reduced expression of iNOS, COX-2, MPO in colon, reduction of p65-NF- | [ |
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| Effect of wheat anthocyanins on DSS induced colitis in mice | No dose specified. 14 d exposure | No sign. effects on colon length, bw., histopathology, markers of oxidative stress (FRAP, TAC, AOPP) | Degradation of anthocyanins, unclear dose, too much focus on antioxidant effects only | [ |
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| Effect of cranberry extract on mice | C57BL/6J mice on high fat/high sucrose diet receiving either water or cranberry extract for 8 weeks | Mice receiving cranberry extract showed reduced intestinal oxidative stress & inflammation | Enhanced population with | [ |
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| Effect of cacao extract on mice with DSS induced colitis | 5 & 10% cacao diets for 62 d | Inhibited proliferation of tumor epithelial cells, suppressed colonic IL-6, TNF- | Reduced expression & activation of STAT3, NF- | [ |
See footnote of Table 3.
In vitro trials suggesting health benefits of polyphenols with respect to IBD—an overview.
| Aspects studied | Dosing and time | Effects found | Mechanism proposed and critics | Reference |
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| Effect of phytolens (water-soluble extract of PP antioxidants from nonsoy legumes) on colonic (T84) & murine macrophage (RAW 264.7) cells | Phytolens (10–100 | Phytolens sign. attenuated apoptosis in T84 cells induced by ONOO−. Phytolens did not directly affect T84 cell viability or induce apoptosis after 4 h or overnight exposure. RAW 264.7 cells exposed to phytolens displayed decreased cell viability & increased apoptosis | Potential beneficial effects of phytolens on inflammation via attenuating induced apoptosis | [ |
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| PP standards effects of Caco-2 cells | Chrysin, ellagic acid, genistein, & EGCG (all 50 | Chrysin & ellagic acid inhibited NF- | Anti- & proinflammatory aspects of PP | [ |
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| Effect of PP metabolites 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl-acetic acid (ES) & 3-(3,4-dihydroxy-phenyl)-propionic acid (PS) on LT97 colon cells | Cells incubated with ES (0–18 | PP metabolites did not affect cell number but sign. upregulated GSTT2 expression & decreased COX-2 | Intestinal metabolites showed anti-inflammatory properties | [ |
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| Effect of red wine PP extract (from Lenoir grapes) on human colon-derived CCD-18 Co myofibroblasts cells | 0–100 | Red wine extract decreased mRNA expression of NF- | miR-126, a target region within the 3′-UTR of VCAM-1 mRNA, was increased at 100 | [ |
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| Effect of PP-rich grape seed (GS) & grape marc (GM) on Caco-2 cells | 24 h with up to 2 mg/mL | Decreased mRNA levels of NF- | 2 mg/mL ethanolic extracts dose-dependently reduced NF- | [ |
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| Effect of apple peel PP on Caco-2/15 cells | 250 | Apple peel PP prevented Fe/ascorbate-mediated lipid peroxidation & counteracted LPS-mediated inflammation by downregulating cytokines (TNF- | Downregulation of COX-2 & NF- | [ |
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| Effect of red wine extract (RWE) (rich in catechin B1 & malvidin-3-glucoside) on HT-29 colon cells | 100–600 | RWE suppressed I | RWE reduced NF- | [ |
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| Effect of catechin, theaflavin, malvidin, cyanidin & apigenin on human Int-407 cells treated with ketoprofen | 25 | Catechin sign. decreased levels of lipid peroxidation & ROS (MDA, DCF) & increased activity of intracellular antioxidant enzymes GPx, Gred, total sulfhydryl groups (TSH) | ROS reduction of PP. WB analysis revealed that catechin stimulated a time-dependent increase in Nrf-2 & total HO-1 protein expression | [ |
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| Effect of cyanidin-3-glucoside on HT-29 colon cells | 25 | Improved NO, PGE2 & IL-8 production | Improved iNOS & COX-2 expressions. No effect on NF- | [ |
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| Effect of blueberry anthocyanin-rich extract on Caco-2 cells | Up to 100 | Reduced IL-1 | Reduced activation of NF- | [ |
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| Effect of resveratrol on HT-29 colon cells | 25 | Decreasing levels of activated | Downregulation of JAK-STAT pathway, though not counteracting cytokine-triggered negative feedback mechanism of STAT1 through p38 MAPK | [ |
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| Plum & cabbage digesta: triple culture cell model: Caco-2/HT-29-MTX with THP-1 | 18 h of incubation following digestion | Reduction of IL-8 secretion by plum varieties | Influences via NF- | [ |
See footnote of Table 3.
Figure 3Potential effects of polyphenols on the gut microbiota and possible resulting health effects. SCFA: short-chain fatty acid (butyrate, propionate, and acetate). TEER: trans-epithelial electrical resistance.