Antioxidant Property of Coffee Components: Assessment of Methods that Define Mechanisms of Action
"> Figure 1
<p>Reaction mechanism of 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl (DPPH) with antioxidant. R:H = antioxidant radical scavenger; R = antioxidant radical.</p> "> Figure 2
<p>Mechanisms of antioxidant reacting with free radical: single electron transfer (SET) and hydrogen atom abstraction (HAT). In SET mechanism, the IP (ionization potential) of the antioxidant is the most important energetic factor in evaluating the antioxidant action. In the HAT mechanism, the BDE (bond dissociation enthalpy) of the antioxidant is the important parameter in evaluating the antioxidant action.</p> ">
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Assay | Source of Free Radical | Reaction Mechanisms | Method of Quantification of the Targeted Free Radical | Application to Measure Antioxidant Activity of Coffee | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Species of the Beans | Roasting Degree of the Beans | Ref. | ||||
DPPH | Dissolve DPPH in ethanol | SET or HAT |
| Blend of different varieties | Green | [8] |
Blend of different varieties | Light, medium and dark | [9] | ||||
Arabica and Robusta | Green | [10] | ||||
Arabica and Robusta | Arabica (219 °C for 905 s); Robusta (228 °C for 859 s) | [11] | ||||
ABTS | Oxidize ABTS with potassium persulfate | HAT |
| Blend of 80% Arabica and 20% Robusta | Green, light, medium and dark | [12] |
Arabica, Robusta and a blend of these two | Green, medium and dark | [13] | ||||
Arabica | Light (225 °C for 3 min); medium (233 °C for 3 min); dark (240 °C for 3 min) | [14] | ||||
Arabica and Robusta | Arabica (219 °C for 905 s); Robusta (228 °C for 859 s) | [11] | ||||
FRAP | Fe3+/tripyridyltriazine complex | SET | Measure the absorption of ferrous at 593 nm | Blend of different species | Green | [8] |
Arabica | Medium, dark and blend of medium (70%) and dark (30%) | [15] | ||||
Arabica and Robusta | Green | [10] | ||||
ORAC | Dissolve AAPH in buffer to form peroxyl radicals | HAT |
| Arabica | Not declared | [16] |
Arabica and Robusta | Light, medium, and dark | [17] | ||||
Arabica | Green | [18] | ||||
HO− Scavenging Assay |
| Not defined |
| Arabica and Robusta | Green | [10] |
Not declared | Not declared | [19] | ||||
Arabica | Green | [18] | ||||
Arabica and Robusta | 190 ± 3 °C for 18–20 min | [20] | ||||
O2− Scavenging Capacity Assay |
| Not defined |
| Arabica | Green | [18] |
2. In Vitro Assays Commonly Used to Evaluate Antioxidant Activity of Coffee and Mechanisms of Action
2.1. DPPH Assay
2.2. ABTS Assay
2.3. FRAP and TRAP Assays
2.4. ORAC Assay
2.5. Hydroxyl Radical Scavenging Assay
2.6. O2− Scavenging Capacity Assay
3. Coffee Components with Antioxidant Activity (Chemical Assays)
3.1. Caffeine
3.2. Chlorogenic Acids
3.3. Coffee Maillard Reaction Products
4. Coffee Components with Antioxidant Capacity (Cellular Antioxidant Activity Assays and Animal Studies)
4.1. Caffeine
4.2. Chlorogenic Acid
Coffee Components | Cell-Based Studies | Animal-Based Studies | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cell Line | Oxidative Stress Stimulator | Description of Oxidative Stress after Coffee Component Treatment, Compared to the Negative Control | Ref. | Animal | Oxidative Stress Stimulator | Description of Oxidative Status after Coffee Component Treatment Compared to the Negative Control | Ref. | |
Caffeine | Pulmonary epithelial A549 cell | hyperoxia | ↓ROS level | [86] | Rat | None | ↑GR, ↑GSH, ↑SOD, (No change) in GPx in brain | [88] |
MLE 12 | hyperoxia | ↓ROS level | [86] | Mice | 5% ethanol in diet | ↓ROS, ↓TNF-α,↓ proinflammatory cytokines and chemokines in liver | [89] | |
Human skin fibroblast WS-1 cell | H2O2 | ↓ROS level; ↓4-hydroxy-2-nonenal | [87] | Rabbit | Cholesterol-enriched diet | ↑GSH, ↓ROS, ↓8-Isoprostaglandin F2α | [90] | |
Chlorogenic acid | Human HaCaT keratinocyte | UVB irradiation | ↓DNA damage, ↓Apoptotic bodies, ↓Apoptosis-related proteins, ↑Cell viability | [91] | Rat | Paraquat | ↑Liver triacylglycerol, ↑Phospholipid | [96] |
Mesenchymal stem cell | H2O2 | ↑Expression of FOXO family genes, ↓Apoptosis | [92] | Rat | High fat diet/streptozotocin treated | ↓Thiobarbituric acid, ↑SOD, ↑Catalase | [97] | |
PC12 cell | t-BOOH, or H2O2, or FeSO4 | ↑GSH, ↓MDA | [93] | |||||
Human hepatoma HepG2 cell | t-BOOH | ↑GSH | [94] | |||||
Melanoidins | Human hepatoma HepG2 cell | t-BOOH | ↑GSH, ↓MDA | [98] | Rat | High-fat, high-calorie solid diet | ↓Pro-inflammatory cytokines, ↑Anti-inflammatory cytokines | [99] |
Human neuroblastoma cell IMR32 | H2O2 | ↑Cell viability | [100] | |||||
Trigonelline | Not available | Rat | Streptozotocin treated | ↑SOD, ↑Catalase, ↑GSH, ↓MDA, ↓NO | [101] | |||
Cafestol and kahweol | Neuronal cell line SH-SY5Y | 6-Hydroxydopamine | ↑Nrf2 nuclear translocation, | [102] | Mice | CCl4 | ↑GSH, ↓MDA | [103] |
NIH3T3 cell | H2O2 | ↓ TBARS, ↓ ROS, ↓ DNA damage | [104] |
4.3. Coffee Maillard Reaction Products
4.4. Trigonelline
4.5. Cafestol and Kahweol
5. Antioxidant Activity of Coffee in Human Studies
Participants and Exclusion Criteria | Experiment Design and Treatment Conditions | Indicators/Biomarkers of Oxidative Status | Results and Conclusion | Ref. | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
N = not given; Gender: not given; Age: not given; Eligibility: healthy, non-smoking, moderate coffee drinker; avoid antioxidant supplements and have a diet low in “coffee, wine, chocolate, tea, fruit and vegetable” in the two days before the experiment. | Experiment group: 200 mL of coffee (60 g of roasted ground coffee beans were prepared by a 5-min infusion in 1 L of boiling water); Control: 200 mL of tea. | Plasma antioxidant activity; plasma SH groups | Results: Experiment group: significantly ↑ plasma antioxidant capacity measured by TRAP method; the plasma SH group did not change significantly. Control: Non-significant change in both parameters. Conclusions: Coffee consumption improves antioxidant capacity in vivo. | [108] | |
N = 36; Gender: both; Age: 27 ± 8; Eligibility: healthy, non-smoking adults with BMI 20–25, no intake of drugs and supplements four week prior the study, no pregnancy and no blood withdrawal three weeks before the study. | Experiment group: instant coffee (800 mL/day for five days) co-extracted from green and roasted beans Control: 800 mL water/day for five days | 8-Isoprostaglandin F2α; DNA migration; MDA; GPx; GST; SOD; intracellular ROS | Results: Experiment group showed a 15.3% 8-isoprostaglandin F2α decrease in urine and 16.1% 3-nitrotyrosine compared to the control group. Other parameters did not change significantly compared to the control. Conclusion: Coffee consumption protects humans against oxidative damage. | [109] | |
N = 38; Gender: 14 males and 24 females Age: 27.6 ± 8.0 Eligibility: healthy, non-smokers, no intake of pharmaceutical drugs, no intake of food supplements four weeks prior and during the study, no pregnancy, compliance with the protocol, no blood withdrawal three weeks before the study. | Cross-over design: participants were allocated into two groups (18 coffee/water and 20 water/coffee); the coffee/water group drank 800 mL coffee/day for five days, after a five-week washout phase and a one-week restriction (800 mL water/day); the water/coffee group followed the reverse order | Oxidized purines, MDA, 3-nitrotyrosine, glutathione, intracellular ROS, SOD and GPx, 8-isoprostaglandin F2α | Results: Coffee intake decreased DNA-damage (oxidized purines) by 12.3%; coffee intake did not markedly alter other redox status parameters. Conclusion: Coffee consumption prevents endogenous formation of oxidative DNA-damage in humans. | [110] | |
N = 40; Gender: not given Age: not given Eligibility: biopsy-proven HCV-related chronic hepatitis or cirrhosis, no consumption of other caffeine-containing beverages | Cross-over design: participants were allocated into Groups 1 and 2: Group 1 drank four cups coffee/day for one month and had the first blood sample taken, then continued with no coffee for 30 days and had the second blood sample taken). Group 2 followed the reverse order. | Makers of oxidative damage: 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine, nitric oxide, advanced oxidation protein products | Results: 8-hydroxydeoxyguanosine was significantly lower than during abstinence. Conclusion: In chronic hepatitis C patients, coffee consumption induces a reduction in oxidative damage. | [112] | |
N = 18; Gender: male; Age: not given; Eligibility: non-smoking, BMI < 32, not on medication and does not have chronic disease, regular coffee drinker, restricted intake of coffee, caffeinated products, dietary supplements and foods rich in polyphenols. | Intervention trial: Four-week wash out period, four weeks of brewed coffee (prepared from a blend of green and roasted beans; 29.5 g ground coffee in 600 mL water) consumption (750 mL/day); and another eight weeks of wash out. | Nrf2 gene transcription level in blood sample | Results: Thirty six percent of participants displayed a significant >1.5 alteration of Nrf2 transcription after coffee consumption compared to the wash out period; 64% of the participants showed no change. Conclusion : Induction of Nrf2 gene transcription by coffee in humans depends on the genotype of subjects. | [113] | |
N = 29; Gender: not given; Age: not given; Eligibility: healthy volunteers | Intervention trial: Four-week wash out period, four weeks of brewed coffee (prepared from a blend of green and roasted beans; 29.5 g ground coffee in 600 mL water) consumption (750 mL/day); and another four weeks of wash out. | Nrf2 transcription level in peripheral blood lymphocytes | Results: Coffee consumption increased Nrf2 transcription in peripheral blood lymphocytes on average. Conclusion: Coffee acts as a modulator of Nrf2-depended gene response in humans, but genetic polymorphisms play an important role in the individual response pattern. | [114] | |
N = 47; Gender: 11 male and 36 female; Age: 54 ± 9; Eligibility: habitual coffee drinkers, free of type 2 diabetes. | Single blind, three-stage clinical trial: One-month wash out period; 600 mL filtered coffee per day for one month, followed by 1,200 mL filtered coffee per day for another month. | IL-18, IL-6, macrophage migration inhibitory factor, leptin, C-reactive protein, serum amyloid A, 8-isoprostane, nitrotyrosine, LDL:HDL cholesterol | Results: Significant ↓ in IL-18, 8-isoprostane, LDL:HDL cholesterol. Conclusion: Coffee consumption appears to have beneficial effects on subclinical inflammation. | [115] | |
N = 16; Gender: 8 male and 8 female; Age: 29.2 ± 14.4; Eligibility: non-smoking, healthy, without a history of cardiovascular or metabolic disease, did not subject use medications or dietary supplements throughout the study period. | Random, crossover design: Each subject has three visits (one visit every day); at each visit, the subject firstly consumes a milk shake (containing 12.2 kCal/kg of body weight) followed by consuming either 480 mL of freshly brewed caffeinated coffee, or decaffeinated coffee, or water. The order of assignment for the three days of testing was random; each subject received all three conditions over the course of the study. | MDA, H2O2, triglycerides | Results: Coffee had no impact on MDA, H2O2 or triglyceride level in blood. Conclusion: Acute coffee consumption following a high-fat milk shake has no impact on postprandial oxidative stress. | [116] |
6. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Liang, N.; Kitts, D.D. Antioxidant Property of Coffee Components: Assessment of Methods that Define Mechanisms of Action. Molecules 2014, 19, 19180-19208. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules191119180
Liang N, Kitts DD. Antioxidant Property of Coffee Components: Assessment of Methods that Define Mechanisms of Action. Molecules. 2014; 19(11):19180-19208. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules191119180
Chicago/Turabian StyleLiang, Ningjian, and David D. Kitts. 2014. "Antioxidant Property of Coffee Components: Assessment of Methods that Define Mechanisms of Action" Molecules 19, no. 11: 19180-19208. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules191119180
APA StyleLiang, N., & Kitts, D. D. (2014). Antioxidant Property of Coffee Components: Assessment of Methods that Define Mechanisms of Action. Molecules, 19(11), 19180-19208. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules191119180