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Antioxidant and Prooxidant Effects of Phenolics on Pancreatic β-Cells in Vitro

Authors :
Michael D. Walker
Joseph Kanner
Tair Lapidot
Source :
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. 50:7220-7225
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2002.

Abstract

A number of natural phenolic compounds display antioxidant and cell protective effects in cell culture models, yet in some studies show prooxidant and cytotoxic effects. Pancreatic beta-cells have been reported to exhibit particular sensitivity to oxidative stress, a factor that may contribute to the impaired beta-cell function characteristic of diabetes. The aim of this study was to examine the potential of natural phenolics to protect cultured pancreatic beta-cells (betaTC1 and HIT) from H(2)O(2) oxidative stress. Exposure of cells to H(2)O(2) led to significant proliferation inhibition. Contrary to what one should expect, simultaneous exposure to H(2)O(2) and the phenolics, quercetin (10-100 microM), catechin (50-500 microM), or ascorbic acid (100-1000 microM), led to amplification of proliferation inhibition. At higher concentrations, these compounds inhibited proliferation, even in the absence of added H(2)O(2). This prooxidant effect is attributable to the generation of H(2)O(2) through interaction of the added phenolic compounds with as yet undefined componenets of the culture media. On the other hand, inclusion of metmyoglobin (30 microM) in the culture medium significantly reduced the prooxidant impact of the phenolics. Under these conditions, quercetin and catechin significantly protected the cells against oxidative stress when these components were present during the stress period. Furthermore, significant cell protection was observed upon preincubation of cells with chrysin, quercetin, catechin, or caffeic acid (50 microM, each) prior to application of oxidative stress. It is concluded that provided artifactual prooxidant effects are avoided, preincubation of beta-cells with relatively hydrophobic natural phenolics can confer protection against oxidative stress.

Details

ISSN :
15205118 and 00218561
Volume :
50
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3592f4c664657186583cbe33e2cdf810
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jf020615a