• Life sciences · Feb 2007

    Protective effects of EGCg or GCg, a green tea catechin epimer, against postischemic myocardial dysfunction in guinea-pig hearts.

    • Masaya Hirai, Yoshihiro Hotta, Naohisa Ishikawa, Yasushi Wakida, Yoshitaka Fukuzawa, Fumitaka Isobe, Akinobu Nakano, Taku Chiba, and Norihisa Kawamura.
    • Department of Cardiac Surgery, Aichi Medical University School of Medicine, Aichi, Japan.
    • Life Sci. 2007 Feb 20; 80 (11): 1020-32.

    AbstractThe protective effects of (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCg) or the C-2 epimer, (-)-gallocatechin-3-gallate (GCg), afforded by their antioxidative activity among green tea catechins were investigated in perfused guinea-pig Langendorff hearts subjected to ischemia and reperfusion. The recovery (%) of the left ventricular developed pressure from ischemia by reperfusion was 34.4% in the control, while in the presence of EGCg (3x10(-5) M) or GCg (3x10(-6) M, a more diluted concentration than that of EGCg), it led to a maximal increase of 78.4% or 76.2%, consistent with a significant preservative effect on the tissue level of ATP at the end of ischemia or reperfusion. In the perfused preparation of mitochondria, EGCg (10(-5) M) inhibited mitochondrial Ca(2+) elevation by changes in the Ca(2+) content or the acidification of perfusate, similarly to findings with cyclosporin A, a well known inhibitor of the mitochondrial permeability transition pore. By in vitro electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR), EGCg or GCg was found to directly quench the activity of active oxygen radicals, with the strongest activity in tea catechins. EGCg or GCg decreased the caspase-3 activity induced apoptosis. Therefore, it is concluded that the beneficial effects of EGCg or GCg play an important role in ischemia-reperfusion hearts in close relation with nitric oxide (NO), active oxygen radicals and biological redox systems in mitochondria.

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