| Literature DB >> 29113421 |
Xiangbing Mao1,2, Changsong Gu1,2, Daiwen Chen1,2, Bing Yu1,2, Jun He1,2.
Abstract
Reactive oxide species are the middle products of normal metabolism, and play a crucial role in cell signaling transduction. On the contrary, accumulation of excess reactive oxide species results in oxidative stress that often brings multifarious impairment to cells, including decrease of ATP level in cells, elevation of cytosolic Ca2+, DNA damage, dysfunction of biological function in lipid bilayer and so on. These effects will finally lead to all kinds of diseases. Tea polyphenols are widely considered as a kind of excellent antioxidant agents. It can be antioxidants by directly scavenging reactive oxide species or chelating transition metals, and indirectly upregulating the activity of antioxidant enzymes. In addition, tea polyphenols have also been observed a potent pro-oxidant capacity, which directly leads to the generation of reactive oxide species, and indirectly induces apoptosis and death of cancer cells. The underlying characters of its pro-oxidant activity in some diseases is not well understood. The present review we will discuss the dual character of tea polyphenols, both antioxidant and pro-oxidant properties, in some human diseases induced by oxidative stress.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant capacity; oxidative stress; pro-oxidant capacity; tea polyphenols
Year: 2017 PMID: 29113421 PMCID: PMC5655316 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.20887
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1The main phenolic compounds of tea polyphenols
Figure 2The process of oxidative stress-induced diseases
Major reaction of oxygen species
| Oxygen free radicals | RNS | Non-radical oxidant | Iron-oxygen complexes | Organic free radicals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| O2 | NO· | H2O2 | Fe = O2+ | R-O |
| O2·− | NO2· | ONOOH | Fe = O3+ | R-OO |
| ·OH | HCLO | ·QH | ||
| HO2· | HOSCN |
Diseases that have been linked to oxidative stress
| Disease | Reference |
|---|---|
| Neurological Disease | |
| Alzheimer's Disease | 38, 49 |
| Parkinson's Disease | 32, 37, 83 |
| Huntington's Disease | 84 |
| Wilson Disease | 85 |
| Cancer | 33, 39, 50, 53, 61 |
| Aging | 21 |
| Vascular Disease | 13 58 |
| Pulmonary Disease | 69 |
| Diabets | 15 18 60 |
| Skin Disease | 88 |
| Chronic kidney Disease | 36, 89 |
| Inflammation | 27, 66, 68, 69, 72 |
| Obesity | 90 |
Figure 3Pathogenesis of oxidative stress-induced neurodegenerative diseases
Figure 4Pathogenesis of oxidative stress-induced carcinogenesis
Figure 5Pathogenesis of oxidative stress-induced inflammation
Figure 6The mechanism of tea polyphenols curing diseases triggered by oxidative stress
Figure 7Some special mechanisms that tea polyphenols inhibit cancers, except increasing antioxidant capacity