| Literature DB >> 30317404 |
Abstract
Exposure to Cd and Pb reduces the activity of antioxidant enzymes, which points to a decrease in the antioxidant potential of the body as a result of supplying factors which enhance cellular oxidation processes. Man is exposed to the effects of toxic metals because they are present in the environment, including in food. Since no effective ways to reduce the concentrations of Cd an Pb in food exist, studies are undertaken to develop methods of reducing their toxic effect on the body through chelating these metals using nutrients (which reduces their absorption by tissues) or increasing the oxidative capacity of the body (which decreases the possibility of inducing oxidative damage to internal organs). Studies performed on laboratory animals have shown that the use of tea infusions fulfil both functions.Entities:
Keywords: Antioxidants; Cadmium; Lead; Oxidative stress; Protective effect; Tea
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30317404 PMCID: PMC6245044 DOI: 10.1007/s10534-018-0153-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biometals ISSN: 0966-0844 Impact factor: 2.949
Fig. 1Chemical structure of some major polyphenols in tea
Effect of tea on an organism exposed to Pb
| Tea | Protective effect | Pb dose and design | Animals | Target sites | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green tea | ↑ TAC; ↑ RGSH; ↑ SOD; ↓ DNA fragmentation | 100 mg of lead acetate/kg bw by gastric tube for 1 month; green tea in drinking water (5 g/l) orally for 1 month | Albino male rats | Brain | Khalaf et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↑ GST; ↑ RGSH; ↑ SOD; ↑ TAC; ↓ LPO; ↓ Pb | 0.4% aqueous solution of lead acetate orally for 6 weeks; green tea in distilled water (15 g/l) orally for 6 weeks | Rats | Brain, blood | Hamed et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↑ SOD; ↓ LPO; ↑ GST; ↓ Pb accumulation | 0.4% aqueous solution of lead acetate orally for 6 weeks; green tea in drinking water (15 g/l) orally for 6 weeks | Male rats | Liver, kidney, brain | Meki et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ LPO; ↑ SOD; ↑ GST; ↑ GSH; ↓ LPO; ↓ Pb accumulation; ↑ urea in blood; ↓ creatinine in blood | 0.4% aqueous solution of lead acetate orally for 6 weeks; green tea in drinking water (15 g/l) orally for 6 weeks or mixture of 0.4% lead acetate + green tea solution (15 g/l) | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Kidney | Abdel-Maneim et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ ALT; ↓ AST; ↓ TC; ↓ LDL; ↓ TG; ↑ HDL | 500 mg lead acetate/kg diet daily for five weeks; green tea extract (882 mg/kg bw/day) orally injected for five weeks | Male albino rats | Blood | El-Ziney et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↑ total protein; ↑ albumin; ↑ SOD; ↑ GST; ↓ AST; ↓ ALT; ↓ ALP; ↓ Pb concentration in liver | 0.4% aqueous solution of lead acetate orally for 30 days; 6.6% green tea extract orally for 30 days | Male Wistar rats | Liver, blood | Hamadouche et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ MDA; ↑ GSH; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↓ Pb accumulation; | 200 mg Pb (as lead acetate)/kg basal diet for 42 days; 1 g green tea based probiotic/kg basal diet for 42 days | Ross broiler chicks | Liver, blood | Yosef et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ Pb accumulation; ↓ LPO; ↑ GSH; ↑ GST; ↑ SOD | Mixture of 1.5 green tea extract and 0.4% lead acetate/l distilled water for 6 weeks | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Testes | Essa et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↑ total protein; ↑ albumin; ↓ AST; ↓ ALT; ↓ ALP; ↓ Pb accumulation; ↑ SOD; ↑ GST | 0.4% aqueous solution of lead acetate orally for 8 weeks; 1.5% green tea extract in drinking water for 8 weeks | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Liver | Mehana et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ LPO; ↑ CAT; ↑ SOD; ↑ GPX | 0.4% aqueous solution of lead acetate orally for 4 weeks; 6.6% green tea extract orally for 4 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Kidneys | Hamadouche et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ MDA; ↑ SOD; ↑ GSH | 1 g/l drinking water lead acetate/day orally for 8 weeks; 1.5% green tea extract orally for 8 weeks | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Testes | El-Beltagy et al. ( |
↑ increased concentration or activity compared to Pb group, ↓ decreased or inhibited concentration or activity compared to Pb group, RGSH reduced glutathione, GSH glutathione, SOD superoxide dismutase, CAT catalase, ALP alkaline phosphatase, LPO lipid peroxidation, TAC total antioxidant capacity, GPX glutathione peroxidase, GST glutathione S-transferase, MDA malondialdehyde, LDL low density lipoprotein, HDL high-density lipoprotein, TG triglicerides, TC total cholesterol, ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, bw body weight
Effect of tea on an organism exposed to Cd
| Tea | Protective effect compared to Cd treated animals | Cd dose and design | Animals | Target sites | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green tea | ↑ sugar; ↑ protein; ↑ ALP; ↓ ACP; ↓ ALT; ↓ AST | 10 mg dose of cadmium chloride/kg bw by oral route; green tea in drinking water (20 or 40 mg/kg bw) orally for 15 or 30 days | Male Wistar rats | Liver | Singh et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↑ Hb; ↑ RBC; ↑ PCV; ↑ TLC; ↑ MCV | 10 mg dose of cadmium chloride/kg bw by oral route; green tea in drinking water (20 or 40 mg/kg bw) orally for 15 or 30 days | Male Wistar rats | Blood | Singh et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ LDL; ↓ GGT; ↓ ACP; ↓ ALP; ↓ bilirubin; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↑ GPX; ↓ TBARs | 20 µmoles of cadmium/kg bw/every 3 days for 6 months by injection; 5% green tea extract in drinking water for 12 h daily during 6 months | Male Wistar rats | Liver, blood | Hamden et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ GSH; ↓ TBARs; ↑ CAT; ↑ GPX | 1.25 mg cadmium chloride/kg bw by injection; 1.5% green tea extract in drinking water for 45 days | Male Wistar rats | Liver | Kumar et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↓ SGOT; ↓ SGPT; ↓ LDH; ↓ GGT | 1.25 mg cadmium chloride/kg bw by injection; 1.5% green tea extract in drinking water for 45 days | Male Wistar rats | Blood | Kumar et al. ( |
| Green tea | ↑ LH; ↑ FSH | first 400 mg cadmium chloride/l distilled water orally by 21 days and 7 or 14 mg/l green tea solvent through 21 consecutive days | Female Wistar rats | Blood | Mahmood et al. ( |
| Black tea | ↓ TG; ↓ LDL; ↑ HDL; ↑ liver structure | 1 mg cadmium chloride/kg bw for 21 days; 2.5% of aqueous solution of black tea extract orally for 21 days | Male Wistar rats | Liver, blood | Mantur et al. ( |
| Kombucha tea | ↓ AST; ↓ ALT; ↓ ALP; ↑ TAC; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↑ GSH; ↓ TBARs; ↓ MDA | 3.5 mg cadmium chloride/kg bw by injection (single dose); kombucha tea ferment during 2 weeks before cadmium chloride injection and 4 weeks after injection | Male albino rats | Liver, kidney, blood | Ibrahim ( |
| Green tea | ↓ MDA; ↑ SOD; ↑ GSH | 4 g/l drinking water cadmium chloride/day orally for 8 weeks; 1.5% green tea extract orally for 8 weeks | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Testes | El-Beltagy et al. ( |
↑ increased concentration or activity compared to Cd group, ↓ decreased or inhibited concentration or activity compared to Cd group, SOD superoxide dismutase, CAT catalase, TAC total antioxidant capacity, GPX glutathione peroxidase, ALP alkaline phosphatase, ACP acid phosphatase, GSH glutathione, TG triglicerides, HDL high-density lipoprotein, LDL low-density lipoprotein, TBARs thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, GGT gamma-glutamyl transferase, MDA malondialdehyde, LH luteinizing hormone, FSH follicle-stimulating hormone, SGOT glutamate oxaloacetate transaminase, SGPT glutamate pyruvate transaminase, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, GGT γ-glutamyl transferase, Hb haemoglobin, RBC red blood cells, PCV packed cell volume, TLC total leucocyte count, MCV mean corpuscular volume, ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, bw body weight
Effect of tea on an organism exposed simultaneously to Cd and Pb
| Tea | Protective effect compared to Pb treated animals | Pb and Cd dose and design | Animals | Target sites | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green, black, red and white | ↓ Cd and Pb accumulation | 7 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride) and 50 mg Pb (as lead acetate)/kg of feed for 12 weeks; infusions of teas as a sole source of drink for 12 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Femur bone, blood | Tomaszewska et al. ( |
| Green, black, red and white | ↓ Cd accumulation; ↓ Pb accumulation in liver; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↑ GSH; ↑ GPX | 7 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride) and 50 mg Pb (as lead acetate)/kg of feed for 6 and 12 weeks; infusions of teas as a sole source of drink for 6 and 12 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Lungs, brain, heart, liver, kidneys | Winiarska-Mieczan ( |
↑ increased concentration or activity compared to Cd/Pb group, ↓ decreased or inhibited concentration or activity compared to Cd/Pb group, SOD superoxide dismutase, CAT catalase, GSH glutathione, GPX glutathione peroxidase
Fig. 2Efficiency of antioxidants mechanisms resulting from the supply of exogenous antioxidants
Effect of antioxidants naturally occurring in tea on an organism exposed to Pb and/or Cd
| Protective effect compared to Pb and/or Cd treated animals | Pb and Cd dose and design | Animals | Target sites | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Quercetin | ↓ MDA; ↓ H2O2; ↑ SOD; ↑ GPX; ↑ GSH; regulation the expression of proapoptotic protein | 4 mg cadmium chloride/kg bw orally daily for 2 weeks; 75 mg quercetin/kg bw orally daily for 2 weeks | Male ICR mice | Testes | Bu et al. ( |
| Quercetin | ↓ AST; ↓ ALT; ↓ ALP; ↓ LDH; ↓ GGT; ↓ TBARS; ↓ hydroperoxides; ↓ protein carbonyls; ↑ vitamin C; ↑ vitamin E; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↑ GPX; ↑ GST; ↑ GSH | 5 mg cadmium chloride/kg bw/day orally for 4 weeks; 50 mg quercetin/kg bw/day orally prior to the administration of Cd for 4 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Blood, liver | Renugadevi and Prabu ( |
| Quercetin | ↓ LPO; ↓ ascorbic acid; ↑ GSH; ↑ CAT; ↑ SOD | 2 mg/kg bw cadmium fluoride by injection for 24 or 48 h; 100 mg/kg bw quercetin by injection for 24 or 48 h | Male and female mice | Liver | Zargar et al. ( |
| Quercetin | ↓ ROS; ↑ GSH/GSSG; ↑ CAT; ↑ SOD; ↑ GPX; ↑ GSH | 500 mg Pb (as lead acetate)/l drinking water orally for 10 weeks; 10 mg/kg bw/day quercetin by oral gavage for 10 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Kidney | Liu et al. ( |
| Quercetin | ↓ Cd and Pb accumulation; ↑ CAT; ↑ SOD; ↑ GPX; ↓ MDA; ↓ H2O2 | mg/kg bw/day cadmium chloride; 20 mg/kg bw/day quercetin 6 h before or 6 h after cadmium chloride or simultaneously | Female Wistar rats | Uteri, ovaries | Nna et al. ( |
| Quercetin | ↓ MDA; ↑ CAT; ↑ SOD; ↑ GPX; reduced the Cd-induced histopathological changes | 1 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride)/kg bw/day by injection for 30 days; 15 mg quercetin/kg bw for 30 days | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Brain | Unsal et al. ( |
| Quercetin | ↓ TBARS; ↑ GSH; ↑ TSH; ↑ vit. C and E; ↑ CAT; ↑ SOD; ↑ GPX; ↑ GST; ↓ hydroperoxide; ↓ protein carbonyls | 5 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride)/kg bw for 4 weeks; 50 mg quercetin/kg bw orally prior to the administration of cadmium for 4 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Blood, kidney | Renugadevi and Prabu ( |
| Catechin | ↓ PLA; ↓ COX; ↓ TXA; ↓ PGI; ↓ TBARS | 500 ppm Cd (as cadmium chloride)/l distilled water orally by 20 weeks; 2.5 or 5 g catechin/kg diet by 20 weeks | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Blood | Choi et al. ( |
| Tannic acid | ↓ Cd and Pb accumulation | 50 mg Pb (as lead acetate) or 7 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride)/l distilled water orally for 6 or 12 weeks; 2% solution of tannic acid in drinking water orally alternatively every 7 days with 100 mg Pb or 14 mg Cd for 6 or 12 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Heart, lungs | Winiarska-Mieczan et al. ( |
| Tannic acid | ↓ Cd accumulation; ↑ SOD after 12 weeks; ↑ CAT both after 6 and 12 weeks | 7 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride) and 50 mg Pb (as lead acetate)/kg of feed for 6 or 12 weeks; tannic acid with drink (0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2 or 2.5% solutions) for 6 or 12 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Brain | Winiarska-Mieczan ( |
| ↓ Cd and Pb accumulation; ↑ SOD after 12 weeks; ↑ CAT both after 6 and 12 weeks | aqueous solutions of [Cd (7 or 14 mg/l distiller water) or Pb (50 or 100 mg/l distilled water)] or 2% tannic acid solution, alternatively every 7 days, for 6 or 12 weeks | ||||
| Tannic acid | in blood: ↓ Cd and Pb; in bones: ↓ Cd and Pb; ↑ cancellous parameters; ↑ articular cartilage constituents | 7 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride) and 50 mg Pb (as lead acetate)/kg of feed for 6 weeks; tannic acid with drink (0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2 or 2.5% solutions) for 6 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Femur bone, blood | Tomaszewska et al. ( |
| Tannic acid | in blood: ↓ Cd and Pb; in bones: ↓ Cd and Pb; ↑ weight and length; ↑ ultimate strength and max. elastic strength; ↑ articular cartilage constituents | 7 mg Cd (as cadmium chloride) and 50 mg Pb (as lead acetate)/kg of feed for 12 weeks; tannic acid with drink (0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2 or 2.5% solutions) for 12 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Femur bone, blood | Tomaszewska et al. ( |
| Tannic acid | ↓ Pb; ↓ AST; ↓ ALT | 20 mg Cd/kg/day by oral gavage for 4 weeks; tannic acid with drink (0.5, 1.0 or 2.0 mg/kg/day) for 4 weeks | Female mice | Blood, liver, kidney | Kim et al. ( |
| Tannic acid | ↓ AST; ↓ ALT; ↓ ALP; ↓ cholesterol; ↑ total protein; ↑ albumin; ↑ globulin | 200 ppm cadmium acetate orally by 12 weeks; 200 ppm tannic acid orally by 12 weeks | Female rats | Blood | Al-Fartosi ( |
| Tannic acid | ↓ LPO; ↓ protein carbonylation; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT; ↑ dehydrogenases | 0.44 mg cadmium chloride/kg bw administered subcutaneously by 15 days; 12, 25 or 50 mg tannic acid/ml orally by 15 days | Male Wistar rats | Blood, liver, kidney | Mishra et al. ( |
| Tannic acid | ↓ LPO; ↑ GSH; ↑ GST; ↑ GPX; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT | 50 mg/kg bw lead acetate intraperitoneally three times a week for two weeks; 50 mg/kg bw tanic acid orally three times a week for two weeks | Male Wistar rats | Brain | Ashafaq et al. ( |
| Polyphenols | ↓ Pb; ↓ urea; ↓ creatinine; ↓ cell apoptosis; ↓ mRNA expression; ↓ ROS | 500 mg/l Pb (as lead acetate) orally for 60 days; 20 or 50 mg/kg bw/day green tea polyphenols by oral gavage for 6 weeks | Male Wistar rats | Kidney | Wang et al. ( |
| Polyphenols | ↓ AST; ↓ ALT; ↑ liver structure | 50 mg cadmium sulfate/l drinking water orally for 30 days; 400 mg/kg bw green tea polyphenols by oral gavage for 30 days | Female albino rats | Blood, liver | Al-Gnami ( |
| Polysaccharides | ↓ Pb; ↑ ALAD; ↓ ROS; ↓ MDA; ↑ GSH; ↑ SOD; ↑ CAT | 0.2% lead acetate by gavage drink for 6 weeks; 50, 100 or 200 mg/kg bw/day red tea polysaccharides by gavage for 6 weeks | Male Kunming mice | Liver, kidney, blood | Li and Liu ( |
↑ increased concentration or activity compared to Cd/Pb group, ↓ decreased or inhibited concentration or activity compared to Cd/Pb group, SOD superoxide dismutase, CAT catalase, LPO lipid peroxidation, ROS reactive oxygen species, TAC total antioxidant capacity, GPX glutathione peroxidase, GST glutathione S-transferase, MDA malondialdehyde, GSH detecting glutathione, GSSG glutathione disulfide, PLA plateled phospholipase A2, COX plateled cyclooxygenase, TXA thromboxane A2, PGI prostacyclin, TBARS thiobarbituric acid reactive substance, ALAD d-aminolevulinic acid dehydratase, GGT gamma glutamyl transferase, MDA malondialdehyde, TSH thyroid stimulating hormone, ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate aminotransferase, ALP alkaline phosphatase, LDH lactate dehydrogenase, bw body weight