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Free Radical Biology and Medicine 2010-Nov

Hydrogen peroxide mediates EGCG-induced antioxidant protection in human keratinocytes.

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Leonilla Elbling
Irene Herbacek
Rosa-Maria Weiss
Christian Jantschitsch
Michael Micksche
Christopher Gerner
Heinrich Pangratz
Michael Grusch
Siegfried Knasmüller
Walter Berger

Mots clés

Abstrait

The beneficial health effects of (-)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), the main catechin of green tea, have been attributed to complex interactions with a focus on antioxidative properties. Susceptibility to autoxidation and production of cytotoxic reactive oxygen species (ROS), mostly H(2)O(2), have been suggested to occur in vitro but also in vivo. In this study, we address whether autoxidation-derived H(2)O(2) may be involved in the cytoprotective effects of EGCG. To that end we investigated keratinocyte-derived HaCat and HL-60 promyelocytic leukemia cells with significantly different sensitivities to H(2)O(2) (IC(50) 117.3 versus 58.3 μM, respectively) and EGCG (134.1 versus 84.1 μM). HaCat cells significantly resisted cytotoxicity and DNA damage based on enhanced H(2)O(2) clearance, improved DNA repair, and reduced intracellular ROS generation. Cumulative versus bolus EGCG and H(2)O(2) treatment and H(2)O(2) pretreatment before subsequent high-dose EGCG and vice versa significantly reduced DNA damage and cytotoxicity in HaCat cells only. Addition of catalase abolished the protective activities of low-dose H(2)O(2) and EGCG. In summary, our data suggest that autoxidative generation of low-dose H(2)O(2) is a significant player in the cell-type-specific cytoprotection mediated by EGCG and support the hypothesis that regular green tea consumption can contribute as a pro-oxidant to increased resistance against high-dose oxidative stressors.

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