Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2596415 Toxicology 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Nitrite, considered a biological waste and toxic product, is being regarded as an important physiological molecule in nitric oxide (NO) biochemistry. Because the interaction of dietary phenolic compounds and nitrite would be kinetically (due to the high concentrations achieved) and thermodynamically (on basis of the redox potentials) feasible in the stomach, we have studied the potential reduction of nitrite by polyphenols present in several dietary sources. By measuring the time courses of NO production in simulated gastric juice (pH 2), the efficiency of the compounds studied is as follows: Epicatechin-3-O-gallate > quercetin > procyanidin B8 dimer > oleuropein > procyanidin B2 dimer > chlorogenic acid > epicatechin > catechin > procyanidin B5 dimer. The initial rates of NO production fall in a narrow range (ca. 1–5 μM s−1) but the distinct kinetics of the decay of NO signals suggest that competition reactions for NO are operative. The proof of concept that, in the presence of nitrite, phenol-containing dietary products induce a strong increase of NO in the stomach was established in an in vivo experiment with healthy volunteers consuming lettuce, onions, apples, wine, tea, berries and cherries. Moreover, selected mixtures of oleuropein and catechin with low nitrite (1 μM) were shown to induce muscle relaxation of stomach strips in a structure-dependent way.Data presented here brings strong support to the concept that polyphenols consumed in a variety of dietary products, under gastric conditions, reduce nitrite to NO that, in turn, may exert a biological impact as a local relaxant.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Environmental Science Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis
Authors
, , , ,