1. Proliferation of hepatic peroxisomes in rats following the intake of green or black tea
- Author
-
Miloslav Dobrota, Emma Copeland, Costas Ioannides, A. Bu-Abbas, Michael N. Clifford, and Ronald Walker
- Subjects
Male ,Flavonoid ,Blotting, Western ,Toxicology ,Microbodies ,Hydroxylation ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Acyl-CoA oxidase ,Animals ,Food science ,Rats, Wistar ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug ,Palmitoyl Coenzyme A ,Tea ,Body Weight ,food and beverages ,Lauric Acids ,General Medicine ,Peroxisome ,Rats ,Microscopy, Electron ,Palmitoyl-CoA oxidase activity ,chemistry ,Biochemistry ,Liver ,Polyphenol ,Microsome ,Peroxisome Proliferators ,Caffeine - Abstract
Rats maintained on green, black or decaffeinated black tea (2.5%, w/v) as their sole drinking fluid displayed higher hepatic CN- insensitive palmitoyl CoA oxidase activity than controls; the extent of increase was similar with the three types of tea. Morphological examination of the liver using electron microscopy revealed an increase in the number of peroxisomes in the tea-treated animals. The same treatment of the animals with green and black tea resulted in a similar rise in hepatic microsomal lauric acid hydroxylation. Analysis by HPLC of the aqueous tea extracts employed in the current study showed that the total flavanol content of the green variety was much higher than the black varieties, and confirmed the absence of caffeine in the decaffeinated black tea. It may be concluded from the present studies that neither caffeine nor flavanoids are likely to be responsible for the proliferation of peroxisomes observed in rats treated with tea.
- Published
- 1999