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Polyphenolic apple juice extracts and their major constituents reduce oxidative damage in human colon cell lines

✍ Scribed by Sandra Schaefer; Matthias Baum; Gerhard Eisenbrand; Helmut Dietrich; Frank Will; Christine Janzowski


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
593 KB
Volume
50
Category
Article
ISSN
1613-4125

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Apple juice containing high amounts of antioxidative polyphenols might protect the intestine against oxidative cell damage. We investigated the preventive effectiveness of polyphenolic juice extracts of different origins (cider and table apples) in comparison to their major constituents in human colon cell lines (Caco‐2, HT29). Parameters studied were (oxidative) DNA damage (Comet assay), glutathione level (photometric kinetic assay), cellular redox status (dichlorofluorescein assay) and antioxidant capacity. The extracts (50–250 μg/mL) modulated DNA damage and redox status in a concentration‐dependent manner at 24‐h incubation. The pomace extraction technology, applied for juice preparation, and the preferential selection of cider apple varieties influenced the polyphenolic pattern and increased the biological effectiveness of the extracts. The preventive potential of major juice constituents (1–100 μM, 24 h) strongly differed: rutin, epicatechin and caffeic acid clearly reduced (oxidative) DNA damage (Caco‐2), chlorogenic acid efficiently decreased cellular reactive oxygen species level (HT29, Caco‐2). The aglyca quercetin and phloretin exhibited the highest preventive/antioxidant capacity in all assays. The stability of the compounds inversely correlated with their preventive effectiveness and might contribute to the observed cell specific sensitivities. In conclusion, apple juice extracts distinctly reduce oxidative cell damage in human colon cell lines, an effect, which in part can be accounted for by their major constituents.


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✍ Sandra Schaefer; Matthias Baum; Gerhard Eisenbrand; Christine Janzowski 📂 Article 📅 2006 🏛 John Wiley and Sons 🌐 English ⚖ 432 KB

## Abstract Diets rich in fruits and vegetables are associated with a lower risk of tumour induction in the intestine and other sites. Apple juice with high amounts of antioxidative phenolics might protect the intestine against reactive oxygen species‐mediated cell damage. We investigated to which