| Literature DB >> 35216071 |
Sylwia Przybylska1, Grzegorz Tokarczyk1.
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are the leading cause of human mortality worldwide. Oxidative stress and inflammation are pathophysiological processes involved in the development of CVD. That is why bioactive food ingredients, including lycopene, are so important in their prevention, which seems to be a compound increasingly promoted in the diet of people with cardiovascular problems. Lycopene present in tomatoes and tomato products is responsible not only for their red color but also for health-promoting properties. It is characterized by a high antioxidant potential, the highest among carotenoid pigments. Mainly for this reason, epidemiological studies show a number of favorable properties between the consumption of lycopene in the diet and a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease. While there is also some controversy in research into its protective effects on the cardiovascular system, growing evidence supports its beneficial role for the heart, endothelium, blood vessels, and health. The mechanisms of action of lycopene are now being discovered and may explain some of the contradictions observed in the literature. This review aims to present the current knowledge in recent years on the preventive role of lycopene cardiovascular disorders.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; atherosclerosis; cardiovascular diseases; inflammation; lycopene; oxidative stress; prevention
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35216071 PMCID: PMC8880080 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23041957
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Lycopene content in tomato and tomato products [16,17].
| Source | Lycopene Contents (mg/100 g) |
|---|---|
| Fresh tomato | 5.6 |
| Tomato juice | 9.04 |
| Ketchup | 16.6 |
| Tomato sauces | 23.8 |
| Tomato concentrate | 54.0 |
| Tomato puree | 21.7 |
| Tomato sun-dried | 45.9 |
Figure 1Chemical structure of lycopene [36].
Figure 2Three possible reactions of lycopene with radical species [41].
Figure 3The antioxidant mechanism of lycopene in CVD.
Figure 4Lycopene and its influence on inflammatory mediators.
Figure 5The effect of lycopene atherosclerosis.
Figure 6The effect of lycopene on the reduction of blood pressure.
The cardioprotective effect of lycopene on humans in clinical trials and meta-analyzes.
| Study Authors/Country | Area of Interest | Study Design | Age and Health Condition | Dose and Treatment Period of Lycopene | Main Findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Misra et al., 2006 (India) | Lipid profile | Parallel, RCT | 41 healthy postmenopausal women at the age of 46 | Two capsules of lycopene (LycoRed) 2 mg per day ( | LycoRed showed beneficial effects on serum lipids and markers of oxidative stress that were comparable to HRT. | [ |
| Paran et al., 2009 (Israel) | Blood pressure | Crossover, RCT | 50 hypertensive patients with hypertension between 46 and 66 years old; SBP 140–159 mmHg | Encapsulated tomato extract (Lyc-O-Mato®) 250 mg, containing 15 mg per day ( | Tomato extract containing 15 mg of lycopene favorable reduction of SBP from 145.8 to 132.2 mmHg and 140.4 to 128.7 mmHg and DBP 82.1 to 77.9 mmHg. Serum lycopene content increased from 0.30 μmol/L | [ |
| Kim et al., 2011 (Korea) | Endothelial function | Parallel, RCT, double-blind | 126 healthy men aged 22–57 years | Lycopene in the form (Lyc-O-Mato®) 6 mg per day ( | Supplementation with lycopene in the amount of 15 mg/day for 8 weeks in the group of tested men had a positive effect on endothelial function. | [ |
| Burton-Freeman et al., 2012 (USA) | Oxidative stress | RCT, Crossover | 25 healthy patients age 27 ± 8 years | Randomly selected patients received ( | Lycopene significantly attenuated high-fat meal ↓LDL oxidation and ↓interleukin-6 a proinflammatory cytokine and a proinflammatory cytokine and inflammation marker | [ |
| Xaplanteris et al., 2012 (Greece) | Endothelial function | RCT, Crossover | 19 healthy patients age 39 ± 13 years | Patients ( | Tomato paste supplementation increased FMD compared with the control period. It improves the functions of the endothelium. Moreover, it lowers plasma lipid peroxides (TOS) | [ |
| Abete et al., 2013 (Spain) | Oxidative stress markers | RCT, Double-blind, Crossover | 30 healthy patients aged 39 ± 6 years | Randomly selected patients received ( | The consumption of tomato sauce with a higher concentration of lycopene (27 mg/day) caused a decrease in oxidized LDL-cholesterol levels | [ |
| Grajendragadkar et al., 2014 (UK) | Vascular function | Parallel, RCT, double-blind | 72 patients, including 36 with cardiovascular disease and 36 healthy volunteers aged 30–80 years | Lycopene 7 mg per day patients healthy ( | Lycopene supplementation in CVD patients improved endothelium-dependent vasodilatation (EDV) by 53%. EDV values were close to the baseline values of healthy patients, indicating an improvement in endothelial function by lycopene. It also caused a slight reduction in SB pressure in patients with CVD by 2.9 mmHg | [ |
| Tsitsimpikou et al., 2014 (Greece) | Metabolic syndrome | Parallel, RCT | 27 patients with metabolic syndrome aged 53 ± 10 years | Randomly selected patients received: I: tomato juice 100 mL 4 times a week over a period of two months ( | Tomato juice: ↓LDL, ↑HDL. In addition, it lowered the markers of inflammation TNF-α and IL-6. Endothelial function and insulin resistance improved also improved as a result of consuming tomato juice | [ |
| Ghavipour et al., 2015 (Iran) | Oxidative stress | RCT | 64 overweight and obese female patients (BMI ¼ 25 kg/m2 or higher) aged between 20 and 30 years | Female students received: I: tomato juice 330 mL/day containing (37.0 mg/day lycopene) ( | Tomato juice consumption significantly: ↑TAC, ↑erythrocyte SOD, ↑CAT and ↑GPx of plasma and ↓MDA of serum compared with the control group after 20 days | [ |
| Deplanque et al., 2016 (France) | Lipid profile | Parallel, RTC | 145 healthy patients aged 17–70 years | Patients divided into two groups, the first (75 patients) taking CRTE capsules containing 15 mg/day lycopene and the second (70 patients) taking placebo capsules without lycopene for 2 weeks | Supplementation of CRTE (tomato extract containing 15 mg of lycopene) for 2 weeks increased the plasma level of lycopene and improved the response of oxidized LDL to a high-fat meal in healthy, normal-weight patients. It also had a positive effect on blood glucose, insulin and TG levels | [ |
| Valderas-Martinez et al., 2016 (Spain) | Atherosclerosis | RCT, Crossover | 40 healthy patients aged 28 ± 11 years | Randomly selected patients received ( | The three groups of products used: RT, TS and TSOO among the examined patients resulted in: ↓TC, ↓LDL, ↑HDL↓. | [ |
| Colmán Martínez et al., 2017 (Spain) | Inflammatory | RCT, Crossover | 28 patients (men) at high risk of cardiovascular disease age 69 ± 3 years | The patients randomly drank in the studies: I: 200 mL (low dose) tomato juice, II: 400 mL (high dose) tomato juice, III: control: water for 4 weeks every day | The use of alternating doses of juices resulted in: ↓ICAM-1, ↓VCAM-1, ↓IL8. A reduction was observed after the consumption of tomato juice (low dose): chemokine CXCL10, CRP, and IFN. However, these changes were not noticed after consuming the juice at a higher dose | [ |
| Petyaev et al. 2018 | Lipid profile | RCT | 142 patients with coronary artery disease aged 45 to 73 years | Patients divided into two groups. One group took lacto-lycopene (Nestle Inc.) ( | The Ga lycopene (lycosome) supplement caused an increase in serum lycopene concentration in patients compared to lacto-lycopene. At the end of the study, it also lowered the oxidized LDL levels by five times. Such an effect was not observed in patients treated with lacto-lycopene. Ga lycopen also caused an increase in tissue oxygenation and flow-mediated dilation by the end of the observational period | [ |
| Wolak et al., 2019 (Israel) | Blood pressure | Parallel, RCT | 61 hypertensive patients aged 35–60 years | Patients divided into 5 groups: I receiving the tomato nutrient complex, (TNC) containing 5 mg of lycopene ( | Supplementation with TNC containing lycopene 15 (from 137.4 mmHg to 127.2 mmHg) and 30 mg (from 136.4 mmHg to 130 mmHg) caused a decrease in SBP. On the other hand, TNC (lycopene 5 mg) and synthetic lycopene 15 mg had no effect on the decrease of SBP. In the case of diastolic blood pressure (DBP), a TNC containing 15 mg of lycopene had a beneficial effect on its reduction (from 83.8 to 78.6) | [ |
Abbreviation, Reference to the abbreviation: RCT, Randomised controlled trial; TC, Total cholesterol; LDL, Low density lipoprotein; HDL, High density lipoprotein; MDA, Malondialdehyde; GSH, Glutathione; SBP, Systolic blood pressure; DBP, Diastolic blood pressure; RH-PAT, Reactive hyperemia peripheral arterial tonometry; SOD, Superoxide dismutase, hs-CRP, high-sensitivity C-reactive protein; sICAM-1, Soluble inter-cellular adhesion molecule-1; sVCAM-1, Soluble vascular-cellular Adhesion Molecule-1; FMD, Flow-mediated dilatation; CVD, cardiovascular diseases; BMI, Body mass index; TAC, Total antioxidant capacity; CAT, Catalase; GPx, Glutathione peroxidase; CRTE, Carotenoid-rich tomato extract; TG, Triglyceride; TSOO, Tomato sauce with refined olive oil; BW, Body weight; CRP, C-reactive protein; IFN, Interferon. ↑, increase; ↓, decrease.
Selected studies on animals administered lycopene to determine its cardioprotective protection.
| Tested Animal | Lycopene Dose | Effective Operation | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Male Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats injected intraperitoneally with LPS at a dose of 1000 ng/kg body weight/rat to induce infection and inflammation triggered hypertriglyceridemia | (10 mg/kg body weight/day) lycopene was dissolved in corn oil and administered to rats by intra-gastric intubation |
Lycopene decreased LPS-induced oxidative stress as well as the expression and level of inflammatory mediators in the plasma. Lycopene treatment down-regulated hepatocyte PCSK-9 expression via down-regulation of HNF-1α. | [ |
| Male Wistar rats injected with angiotensin II (Ang II) (0.3 mg/kg/day) | Lycopene was incorporated into drinking water (the Redivivo® product) 10 mg/kg/day |
Lycopene lowered angiotensin II-induced hypertension. Prevented the increase in left ventricular weight and therefore the LVH index. Prevented cardiomyocyte hypertrophy and myocardial fibrosis. | [ |
| Male Kunming mice ATR (atrazine)-induced cardiac inflammation (50 mg/kg, 200 mg/kg) | 5 mg/kg body weight/day |
Supplementary LYC significantly prevented ATR-induced environmental cardiology and alleviated cardiac injury via modulating the NO and NO-generating systems and blocking the TRAF6-NF-κB. Lycopene was lowering pro-inflammatory TNF-α, IL-6, COX2 and IL-1β. | [ |
| Male BALA/c mice | 10 mg/kg body weight/day |
Lycopene significantly reduced the mRNA expression of TNF-α and IL-1β in infarcted myocardium. Decreased expression of caspase-3, -8 and -9. In addition, lycopene decreased the nuclear localization of nuclear NF-κB p65 and markedly suppressed NF-κB activation. | [ |
| Male Wistar albino rats | (0.5, 1.0 and 1.5 mg/kg body weight/day) for 30 days |
Initial treatment with lycopene significantly attenuated ISP-induced cardiac dysfunction as evidenced by improved SAP, DAP, MAP, HR, (±) LVdP/dt and reduced LVEDP. Lycopene also prevented the depletion of antioxidants (SOD, CAT, GSHPx and GSH) and inhibited lipid peroxidation and MDA formation in the heart. | [ |
Abbreviation, Reference to the abbreviation: LPS, Lycopene in targeting lipopolysaccharide; PCSK-9, Proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type-9; HNF-1α, Hepatocyte nuclear factor-1α; LVH, Left ventricular hypertrophy; LYC, Lycopene; NO, Nitric oxide; TRAF6-NF-κB, Tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 6-nuclear factor-κB; TNF-α, Tumor necrosis factor α; IL-6, Interleukin-6; COX2, Cyclooxygenase 2; IL-1β, Interlekuin-1β; ISP, Isoproterenol; SAP, Systolic pressure; DAP, Diastolic pressure; MAP, Mean arterial blood pressure; HR, Heart rate; LVEDP, Left ventricular end-diastolic pressure; SOD, Superoxide dismutase; CAT, Catalase; GSHPx, glutathione peroxidase; GSH, glutatione, MDA, Malonaldialdehyde.