| Literature DB >> 31174371 |
Shi-Yu Cao1, Cai-Ning Zhao2, Ren-You Gan3, Xiao-Yu Xu4, Xin-Lin Wei5, Harold Corke6, Atanas G Atanasov7,8,9, Hua-Bin Li10.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are critical global public health issues with high morbidity and mortality. Epidemiological studies have revealed that regular tea drinking is inversely associated with the risk of CVDs. Additionally, substantial in vitro and in vivo experimental studies have shown that tea and its bioactive compounds are effective in protecting against CVDs. The relevant mechanisms include reducing blood lipid, alleviating ischemia/reperfusion injury, inhibiting oxidative stress, enhancing endothelial function, attenuating inflammation, and protecting cardiomyocyte function. Moreover, some clinical trials also proved the protective role of tea against CVDs. In order to provide a better understanding of the relationship between tea and CVDs, this review summarizes the effects of tea and its bioactive compounds against CVDs and discusses potential mechanisms of action based on evidence from epidemiological, experimental, and clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: EGCG; bioactive compounds; cardiovascular diseases; mechanisms; polyphenols; tea
Year: 2019 PMID: 31174371 PMCID: PMC6617169 DOI: 10.3390/antiox8060166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Antioxidants (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3921
Figure 1The chemical structures of main catechins in tea associated with cardiovascular disease (CVD) protection.
The effects of tea on CVDs based on epidemiological studies.
| Subjects | Study Type | Effects | Risk Estimates (95%CI) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 90,914 Japanese participants aged 40–69 y | cohort study | Reducing the risk of heart disease and cerebrovascular disease | heart disease: 0.70 (0.56–0.87) for 3–4 cups/day; cerebrovascular disease: 0.73 (0.56–0.94) for 3–4 cups/day | [ |
| 165,000 Chinese adult men without pre-existing disease | cohort study | Reducing the risk of CVDs | 0.93(0.85–1.01) for ≤5 g/day; 0.91 (0.85–0.98) for 5–10 g/day; 0.86 (0.79–0.93) for >10 g/day | [ |
| 74,941 women aged 40–70 y and 61,491 men aged 40–74 y in China | cohort study | Reducing the risk of CVDs | 0.86 (0.77–0.97) | [ |
| 120,852 men and women in the Netherlands aged 55–69 y | cohort study | Reducing the risk of CVDs | 0.72 (0.57–0.91) for 2–3 cups/day in men | [ |
| 19,471 participants free of CHD, stroke or cancer | cohort study | Reducing the risk of CHD | 0.89 (0.81–0.98) | [ |
| 6508 participants from Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis | cohort study | Slowing the progression of coronary artery calcium | 0.71 (0.53–0.95) for ≥1 cup/day | [ |
| 1063 women aged >75 y in Australia | cohort study | Reducing the mortality of CVDs | 0.34 (0.17–0.69) for data from USDA; 0.32 (0.16–0.61) for data from Phenol-Explorer databases | [ |
| 774 Dutch men aged 65–84 y | cohort study | Reducing the risk of CVDs | 0.54 (0.31–0.96) | [ |
| 80,182 Chinese participants aged 37–61 y free of CVDs, cancers, and cholesterol-lowering agent use | cohort study | Increasing blood HDL-C | NA | [ |
| 29,876 participants aged 40–69 y free of heart disease, stroke, or cancer in Japan | case-control study | Lowering the risk of stroke in non-smoking men | 0.53 (0.29–0.98) | [ |
| 1352 participants aged 18–69 y in Luxembourg | cross-sectional study | Decreasing the SBP and pulse pressure | NA | [ |
| 4579 participants aged ≥60 y in China | cross-sectional study | Lowering DBP and the risk of hypertension | 0.79 (0.65–0.95) | [ |
| 5856 participants (case 2909, control 2947) in China | case-control study | Increasing the risk of acute myocardial infarction | 1.29 (1.03–1.61) for 4 cups/d | [ |
Abbreviations: y, year; NA, Not available; CVD, cardiovascular disease; CHD, coronary heart disease; SBP, systolic blood pressure; DBP, diastolic blood pressure.
The effects and mechanisms of tea on CVDs based on in vitro and in vivo experimental studies.
| Substances | Subjects | Study Type | Dose | Effects and Mechanisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green tea extract | Male C57BL/6J mice | In vivo | 0.2% ( | HMGCR↓, HMGCS↓, cholesterol↓ | [ |
| Matcha | Male ICR mice | In vivo | 0.025%, 0.05%, 0.075% ( | TC↓, TG↓, LDL-C↓, serum glucose↓; HDL↑, SOD↑, MAD↑ | [ |
| Pancreatic lipase; Sprague-Dawley male Rats | In vitro and in vivo | IC50 0.48 mg/mL; 500mg/kg | TG↓, pancreatic lipase activity↓ | [ | |
| Green tea infusion | Male Wistar rats | In vivo | 400 mg/kg | Hippocampal oxidative stress↓, necrosis↓ | [ |
| GABA green tea | Male balb/c mice | In vivo | 50 and 100 mg/kg | Oxidative stress↓; Antioxidant endogenous defenses↑ | [ |
| Green tea extract | Pregnant Wistar rats | In vivo | 0.12%, 0.24% | Cardiac macrophage infiltration↓; Insulin↑ | [ |
| Black tea | Female Sprague-Dawley rats | In vivo | 15 mg/kg/day | NADPH oxidases↓, ROS↓; Flow-mediated dilatation↑ | [ |
| Black tea | Rat aortic endothelial cells; Male Sprague Dawley rats | In vitro and in vivo | 0.3–5 μM; 15 mg/kg/day | Endothelial injury↓, serum homocysteine↓, endoplasmic reticulum stress↓ | [ |
| Oolong tea | H9c2 cardiac myoblast cells; Neonatal rat ventricular cardiomyocytes | In vitro | 100, 200, 400 mg/mL | Cardiomyocyte loss ↓, hypertrophy ↓ | [ |
| White tea | Male Wistar rats | In vivo | 1 g/100 mL | Cardiac glycolytic↑, antioxidant capacity↑ | [ |
| EGCG | Human umbilical vein endothelial cells; ApoE−/− mice | In vitro and in vivo | 50 µM; 0.8 g/L | Endothelial dysfunction↓; Jagged-1/Notch activated | [ |
| EGCG | ApoE−/− mice | In vivo | 40 mg/kg/d | IL-6↓, TNF-α↓, TG↓, TC↓, LDL↓; IL-10↑, HDL↑, LXR/SREBP-1 pathways modulated | [ |
| EGCG | H9c2 cardiac myoblast cells | In vitro | 5, 10, 15, and 20 µM | Hypoxia/reoxygenation induced apoptosis↓ | [ |
| EGCG | H9c2 cardiac myoblast cells | In vitro | 10 μM | Apoptosis↓; Stabilizing mitochondrial membrane potential | [ |
| EGCG | Albino Westar rats | In vivo | 15 mg/kg. | Myocardial infarction↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | In vivo | 10 mg/kg | Myocardial apoptosis↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Chinchilla rabbit heart | In vitro | 20 μM/L | Oxidative stress↓; ATP↑ | [ |
| EGCG | Male Wistar rats | In vivo | 10 mg/kg | Plasma mtDNA↓, TNF↓, IL-6 ↓, IL-8↓, ventricular arrhythmia↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Human umbilical vein endothelial cells | In vitro | 10, 20, 30 µM | Apoptosis↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Human aortic smooth muscle cells | In vitro | 20 µM | Homocysteine-induced proliferation↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Bovine aortic endothelial cells; WT C57BL mice and TRPV1−/− mice | In vitro and in vivo | 0, 1.25, 2.5, 10, 20 μM; 10 μM | Angiogenesis↑ | [ |
| EGCG | Wistar albino rats | In vivo | 200 mg/kg | Cardiac hypertrophy↓, fibrosis↓, LDL↓, VLDL↓, TG↓, TC↓; HDL↑, TGFβ↑, TNFα↑, NF-κB↑ | [ |
| EGCG | Zebrafish embryos | In vivo | 50, 100 μM | Damage caused by bisphenol A↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Human umbilical vein endothelial cells | In vitro | 50, 100, 200, 300, 400 μM | Oxidative stress↓; Nrf2↑, HO-1↑ | [ |
| EGCG | Heart/muscle-specific MnSOD-deficient mice | In vivo | 10 mg/L, 100 mg/L | Myocardial oxidative stress↓, free fatty acid↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | In vivo | 25, 50 mg/kg/day | Ang II type 1 receptor↓, ERK1/2↓; PPARγ ↑ | [ |
| EGCG | Human monocyte cell line | In vitro | 50 µg/mL | Inflammatory response↓ | [ |
| EGCG | Male C57/BL6 mice | In vivo | 0, 2.5, 5, 10 μM | TLR4 expression↓ | [ |
| Epicatechin | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | In vivo | 10, 20, 40 mg/kg | TC↓, LDL-C↓, TG↓; HDL-C↑ | [ |
| Theanine | H9c2 cardiac myoblast cells | In vitro | 0, 4, 8, 16 μM | Peroxide-induced apoptosis↓, ROS↓; SOD↑ | [ |
Up arrows mean increase, down arrows mean decrease. HMGCR, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutary-coenzyme A reductase; HMGCS, 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutary-coenzyme A synthase; TC, total cholesterol; TG, triglyceride; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol; HDL, high-density lipoprotein; SOD, superoxide dismutase; MAD, malondialdehyde; NADPH, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate; ROS, reactive oxygen species; IL, interleukin; TNF, tumor necrosis factor; VLDL, very low-density lipoprotein; TGF, transforming growth factor; NF, nuclear factor; Nrf2, nuclear factor E2-related factor 2; HO-1, heme oxygenase-1; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinases; PPAR, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor; TLR, toll-like receptor.
Figure 2Signaling pathways involved in the protective effects of tea bioactive compounds against cardiovascular diseases. Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) reduced atherosclerosis by inhibiting the activation of the Notch receptor induced by oxidized-LDL. EGCG and epicatechin could attenuate dyslipidemia through regulating the SREBP1 pathway. EGCG could reduce the reactive oxygen species level in mitochondria and stabilize the mitochondrial membrane potential, thus attenuating cell swelling and apoptosis of endothelial cells. EGCG and epicatechin could reduce the apoptosis of cardiac cells through regulating the PI3K pathway. EGCG could protect endothelial function through alleviating endoplasmic reticulum stress. EGCG and catechin could elevate the endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS), thus protecting endothelial function. EGCG could reduce oxidative stress by regulating the p38 MAPK and ERK1/2 pathways. Abbreviations: ADAM, A-Disintegrin-And-Metalloprotease; NICD, Notch intracellular domain; PI3K, phosphatidylinositol-3-kinase; Akt, α serine/threonine-protein kinase; SREBP, sterol regulatory element binding transcription factor; LXR, liver X receptor; RXR, retinoid X receptor; NCOA6, nuclear receptor coactivator 6; PTEN, phosphatase and tensin homolog; PDK, phosphoinositide dependent kinase; Nrf, nuclear factor E2-related factor; HO-1, heme oxygenase-1; TRPV, transient receptor potential vanilloid type.
The effects of tea against CVDs based on clinical studies.
| Subjects | Substances | Treatments | Effects and Mechanisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 155 healthy participants | A green tea containing | 12 g/d for 12 weeks | LDL-C↓, LAB↓ | [ |
| 151 participants aged 30–70 y | Green tea | 1.8 g/d for 12 weeks | LDL-C↓ | [ |
| 15 participants aged 18–35 y and 15 participants aged 55–75 y | Green tea | 2 cups/d for 14 days | Improving SBP and skin microvascular function | [ |
| 20 women aged 32.7–49.5 y | Green tea extract | 500 mg for 4 weeks | SBP↓ | [ |
| 50 healthy men | Green tea | A single dose of 200 mg EGCG | Improving flow-mediated dilation | [ |
| 14 healthy individuals | Green tea polyphenol-enriched ice cream | A single dose of 100 g | Oxidative stress↓,Vascular function↑ | [ |
| 79 hypertension patients aged 20–55 y | Flavonoids from green tea | 425.8 ± 13.9 mg epicatechin equivalents for 6 months | SBP ↓, DBP↓ | [ |
| 60 individuals with mild hypercholesterolemia | Catechin-enriched green or oolong tea | 780.6 mg/d or 640.4 mg/d catechin for 12 weeks | TC↓, LDL-C↓, TG↓ | [ |
| 1075 healthy postmenopausal women | Catechins | 1315 mg for 1 year | TC↓, LDL-C↓, non-HDL-C levels↓ | [ |
| 99 participants aged 25–60 y with mild hypercholesterolemia | Phytosterol-enriched instant black tea | 2.5 g/d for 4 weeks | Blood lipids↓ | [ |
| 19 hypertensive patients | Black tea | 129 mg/d flavonoids for 8 days | SBP↓ | [ |
| 19 hypertension patients | Black tea | 150 mg polyphenols for 8 days | Endothelial function↑ | [ |
| 37 (Pre)hypertensive participants aged 40–80 y | Epicatechin or quercetin-3-glucoside | 100 mg/d or 160 mg/d, respectively, for 4 weeks | Inflammation↓,Endothelial function ↑ | [ |
Up arrows mean increase, down arrows mean decrease; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol; LAB, apolipoprotein B; SBP, systolic blood pressure; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; TC, total cholesterol; TG, triglyceride; HDL, high-density lipoprotein.