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Tea and its components reduce the production of uric acid by inhibiting xanthine oxidase

Authors :
Dan Wu
Ruohong Chen
Wenji Zhang
Xingfei Lai
Lingli Sun
Qiuhua Li
Zhenbiao Zhang
Junxi Cao
Shuai Wen
Zhaoxiang Lai
Zhigang Li
Fanrong Cao
Shili Sun
Source :
Food & Nutrition Research, Vol 66, Pp 1-16 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Swedish Nutrition Foundation, 2022.

Abstract

Background: The health benefits of tea are as diverse including the reduction of uric acid levels. Xanthine oxidase is the most directly mediated enzyme in the production of uric acid. Objective: To explore the inhibitory effects of different teas and its main bioactive components on the production of uric acid. Design: Experimental study. The experiments were conducted in vitro using human immortalized normal liver cell line HL-7702 (L-02). Results: The inhibition of the xanthine oxidase activities and the expression level of xanthine dehydrogenase mRNA stimulated in the hyperuric hepatocyte cell model showed that the unfermented green tea and th1e lightly fermented yellow tea, white tea, and oolong tea significantly stronger than the highly fermented black tea and dark tea. The main bioactive compound, gallic acid, showed the strongest inhibitory effect on uric acid production, followed by tea polyphenols and theaflavins. Discussion: All teas exhibited significant inhibition of xanthine oxidase activities, and the degree of fermentation of tea may be inversely proportional to its ability to inhibit the production of uric acid. Compared with tea polyphenols rich in tea, gallic acid may be a more potential uric acid-lowering component. Conclusion: In this article, we first compared the effects of six traditional Chinese tea made from a single variety in stabilizing the synthesis of uric acid and found that the lighter the fermentation, the greater the potential for inhibiting the production of uric acid. Furthermore, we analyzed the inhibitory effects of its main biochemical active ingredients and found that the inhibitory effects of polyphenols rich in lightly fermented tea were significantly stronger than caffeine rich in highly fermented tea. Our findings will be helpful for people to choose a proper tea for alleviating hyperuricemia and provide a scientific basis for uric acid-lowering tea processing.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1654661X
Volume :
66
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Food & Nutrition Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.f66aa566a19248adb7935258eb5ab8b5
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.29219/fnr.v66.8239