What are
Flavonoids?
- ''flavonoids'', derived from
2-phenylchromen-4-one (2-phenyl-1,4-benzopyrone) structure (examples: quercetin,
rutin).
- ''isoflavonoids'', derived from
3-phenylchromen-4-one (3-phenyl-1,4-benzopyrone) structure
- ''neoflavonoids'', derived from
4-phenylcoumarine (4-phenyl-1,2-benzopyrone) structure.
The three
flavonoid classes above are all ketone-containing compounds, and as such, are
flavonoids and flavonols. This class was the first to be termed
"bioflavonoids." The terms flavonoid and bioflavonoid have also been
more loosely used to describe non-ketone polyhydroxy polyphenol compounds which
are more specifically termed flavanoids, flavan-3-ols, or catechins (although
catechins are actually a subgroup of flavanoids).
Flavonoids
are widely distributed in plants fulfilling many functions.
Flavonoids are
the most important plant pigments for flower coloration producing yellow or
red/blue pigmentation in petals designed to attract pollinator animals.
Flavonoids
secreted by the root of their host plant help ''Rhizobia'' in the infection
stage of their symbiotic relationship with legumes like peas, beans, clover,
and soy. Rhizobia living in soil are able to sense the flavonoids and this
triggers the secretion of Nod factors, which in turn are recognized by the host
plant and can lead to root hair deformation and several cellular responses such
as ion fluxes and the formation of a root nodule.
They also
protect plants from attacks by microbes, fungi and insects.
Flavonoids
(specifically flavanoids such as the catechins) are "the most
common group of polyphenolic compounds in the human diet and are found
ubiquitously in plants". Flavonols, the original bioflavonoids such as
quercetin, are also found ubiquitously, but in lesser quantities. Both sets of
compounds have evidence of health-modulating effects in animals which eat them.
The
widespread distribution of flavonoids, their variety and their relatively low
toxicity compared to other active plant compounds (for instance alkaloids) mean
that many animals, including humans, ingest significant quantities in their
diet. Resulting from experimental evidence that they may modify allergens, viruses, and
carcinogens, flavonoids have potential to be biological "response
modifiers", such as anti-allergic,
anti-inflammatory, anti-microbial and anti-cancer
activities shown from in vitro studies.
Antioxidant activity in vitro
Flavonoids
(both flavonols and flavanols) are most commonly known for their antioxidant
activity in vitro.
Consumers
and food manufacturers have become interested in flavonoids for their possible
medicinal properties, especially their putative role in prevention of cancers
and cardiovascular
diseases. Although physiological evidence is not yet established, the
beneficial effects of fruits, vegetables, and tea or even red wine have
sometimes been attributed to flavonoid compounds rather than to known
micronutrients, such as vitamins and dietary minerals.
Alternatively,
research conducted at the Linus Pauling Institute and evaluated by the European
Food Safety Authority indicates that, following dietary intake, flavonoids
themselves are of little or no direct antioxidant value. As body conditions are
unlike controlled test tube conditions, flavonoids and other polyphenols are
poorly absorbed (less than 5%), with most of what is absorbed being quickly
metabolized and excreted.
The increase
in antioxidant capacity of blood seen after the consumption of flavonoid-rich
foods is not caused directly by flavonoids themselves, but most likely is due
to increased uric acid levels that result from metabolism
of flavonoids. According to Frei, "we can now follow the activity of
flavonoids in the body, and one thing that is clear is that the body sees them
as foreign compounds and is trying to get rid of them."
Other potential health benefits
Cancer
Physiological
processing of unwanted flavonoid compounds induces so-called Phase II enzymes
that also help to eliminate mutagens and carcinogens, and therefore may be of
value in cancer
prevention. Flavonoids could also induce mechanisms that may kill cancer
cells and inhibit tumor invasion.
Research
also indicated that only small amounts of flavonoids may be needed for possible
benefits. Taking large dietary supplements likely provides no extra benefit and
may pose risks. However, certainty of neither a benefit nor a risk has been
proven yet in large-scale human intervention trials.
Capillary stabilizing agents
Bioflavonoids
like rutin, monoxerutin, diosmin, troxerutin and hidrosmin have potential
vasoprotective proprieties still under experimental evaluation.
Antioxidant Activities of Flavonoids
Summary:
Flavonoids are compounds found in fruits, vegetables, and certain beverages
that have diverse beneficial biochemical and antioxidant effects. Their dietary
intake is quite high compared to other dietary antioxidants like vitamins C and
E. The antioxidant activity of flavonoids depends on their molecular structure,
and structural characteristics of certain flavonoids found in hops and beer
confer surprisingly potent antioxidant activity exceeding that of red wine,
tea, or soy.
Flavonoids are polyphenolic
compounds that are ubiquitous in nature and are categorized, according to
chemical structure, into flavonols, flavones, flavanones, isoflavones,
catechins, anthocyanidins and chalcones. Over 4,000 flavonoids have been
identified, many of which occur in fruits, vegetables and beverages (tea,
coffee, beer, wine and fruit drinks). The flavonoids have aroused considerable
interest recently because of their potential beneficial effects on human
health-they have been reported to have antiviral, anti-allergic, antiplatelet,
anti-inflammatory, antitumor and antioxidant activities.
Antioxidants are compounds that
protect cells against the damaging effects of reactive oxygen species, such as
singlet oxygen, superoxide, peroxyl radicals, hydroxyl radicals and
peroxynitrite. An imbalance between antioxidants and reactive oxygen species
results in oxidative stress, leading to cellular damage. Oxidative stress has
been linked to cancer, aging, atherosclerosis, ischemic injury, inflammation
and neurodegenerative diseases (Parkinson's and Alzheimer's). Flavonoids may
help provide protection against these diseases by contributing, along with
antioxidant vitamins and enzymes, to the total antioxidant defense system of
the human body. Epidemiological studies have shown that flavonoid intake is
inversely related to mortality from coronary heart disease and to the incidence
of heart attacks.
The recognized dietary
antioxidants are vitamin C, vitamin E, selenium, and carotenoids. However,
recent studies have demonstrated that flavonoids found in fruits and vegetables
may also act as antioxidants. Like alpha-tocopherol (vitamin E), flavonoids
contain chemical structural elements that may be responsible for their
antioxidant activities. A recent study by Dr. van Acker and his colleagues in
the Netherlands suggests that flavonoids can replace vitamin E as chain-breaking
anti- oxidants in liver microsomal membranes. The contribution of flavonoids to
the antioxidant defense system may be substantial considering that the total
daily intake of flavonoids can range from 50 to 800 mg. This intake is high
compared to the average daily intake of other dietary antioxidants like vitamin
C (70 mg), vitamin E (7-10 mg) or carotenoids (2-3 mg). Flavonoid intake
depends upon the consumption of fruits, vegetables, and certain beverages, such
as red wine, tea, and beer. The high consumption of tea and wine may be most
influential on total flavonoid intake in certain groups of people.
The oxidation of low-density
lipoprotein (LDL) has been recognized to play an important role in
atherosclerosis. Immune system cells called macrophages recognize and engulf
oxidized LDL, a process that leads to the formation of atherosclerotic plaques
in the arterial wall. LDL oxidation can be induced by macrophages and can also
be catalyzed by metal ions like copper. Several studies have shown that certain
flavonoids can protect LDL from being oxidized by these two mechanisms.
Antioxidant flavonoids
(listed in order of decreasing potency)
Pro-oxidant flavonoids
|
The capacity of flavonoids to
act as antioxidants depends upon their molecular structure. The position of
hydroxyl groups and other features in the chemical structure of flavonoids are
important for their antioxidant and free radical scavenging activities.
Quercetin, the most abundant dietary flavonol, is a potent antioxidant because
it has all the right structural features for free radical scavenging
activity.
Recently, chalcone and flavanone
flavonoids with prenyl or geranyl side chains have been identified in hops and
beer by Dr. Fred Stevens and Dr. Max Deinzer at Oregon State University. Hops
are used in beer for flavor. Xanthohumol (a chalcone) and isoxanthohumol and
6-prenylnaringenin (flavanones) are the major prenyl-flavonoids found in beer.
Although the antioxidant activities of these compounds have not been studied,
these flavonoids may be responsible for the antioxidant activity of lager beer,
which is higher than that of green tea, red wine, or grape juice as reported
earlier by Dr. Joe A. Vinson from the University of Scranton in Pennsylvania.
Xanthohumol is found only in beer but in small concentrations.
To assess the antioxidant
activity of the prenylated flavonoids, we-in collaboration with LPI
researchers-evaluated the capacity of these flavonoids to inhibit the oxidation
of LDL by copper. The antioxidant properties of the prenylflavonoids were
compared to those of quercetin (a flavonol), genistein (the major isoflavone in
soy), chalconaringenin (a non-prenylated chalcone), naringenin (a non-prenylated
flavanone), and vitamin E. The possible interaction of xanthohumol, the major
prenylchalcone in beer, with vitamin E to inhibit LDL oxidation induced by
copper was also examined.
Our results showed that the
prenylchalcones and prenylflavones are effective in preventing LDL
oxidation initiated by copper and that the prenylchalcones generally have
greater antioxidant activity than the prenylflavanones. Xanthohumol, the major
prenylchalcone in hops and beer, is a more powerful antioxidant than vitamin E
or genistein. However, xanthohumol was less potent than quercetin. The potency
of xanthohumol as an antioxidant is markedly increased when combined with an
equivalent amount of vitamin E.
As reported in the Journal of
Agricultural and Food Chemistry, we also found that the prenyl group plays
an important role in the antioxidant activity of certain flavonoids. A
flavonoid chalcone (chalconaringenin) and a flavanone (naringenin) with no prenyl
groups act as pro-oxidants, i.e. they promote rather than limit the oxidation
of LDL by copper. However, adding a prenyl group to these flavonoid molecules
counteracted their pro-oxidant activities.
Our work reveals that there are
unique flavonoids in hops and beer that may be potentially useful in the
preventionof human disease attributed to free radical damage. The observation
that prenyl groups are important in conferring antioxidant activity to certain
flavonoids may lead to the discovery or synthesis of novel prenylated
flavonoids as preventive or therapeutic agents against human diseases
associated with free radicals. Our encouraging results with xanthohumol suggest
that this prenylchalcone should be further studied for its antioxidant action and
protective effects against free radical damage in animals and humans.
Preliminary studies have shown that xanthohumol is absorbed from the digestive
tract in rats, and more studies are needed to evaluate the bioavailability of
these interesting flavonoids in people.
Further studies are also needed
to establish the safety of xanthohumol or other flavonoids for use as dietary
supplements since high doses of these compounds may produce adverse effects in
humans, according to recent findings by Dr. Martyn Smith, professor of
toxicology, University of California at Berkeley.
After I read your blog about flavonoid, I want to ask you..
BalasHapusif there is a deficiency or excess of flavonoids in plants, whether the plants will occur a disorder, abnormalities or a disease?
puput,,, before I answee your question,I want top ask you,have you ever heard that there is a shortage of plant flavonoids?
Hapusas far as I know the plant is producing flavonoid pigments in the plant, if there is no vlafonoid the plant is not visible because there is no color pigment (abstract)
after i read your blog i found the sentence "Flavonoid also protect plants from attacks by microbes, fungi and insects". would you like explain "How can flavonoid protect plants from attacks by microbes, fungi and insects?" Thank you
BalasHapushi via
Hapuslooks like I'll try to answer them
Flavonoids (specifically flavanoids such as the catechins) is "the most common group of polyphenolic compounds in the human diet and are found ubiquitously in plants". Flavonols, the original bioflavonoids such as quercetin, also found ubiquitously, but in smaller amounts. Both sets of compounds have medical evidence of modulation effects in animals that eat them.
Where Catechins are the natural compounds of plant secondary metabolites that have antioxidant activity due fenoliknya groups. Having many phenol compounds, often called the compound catechin polyphenols and polyphenols term is a lot of community awareness.
The main structure is diarilpropan, it means having two aromatic rings circumference of which there are six three-carbon chain, either straight or branched.
Catechins capture free radicals and inhibit the prooxidant enzyme inhibition of ROS that can cause oxidative stress and LDL oxidation. (2) Catechins increase intestinal lipid excretion, inhibits the synthesis and absorption of cholesterol, FFA and triglycerides. (3) catechins stimulate the production of NO, prostacyclin and endothelial cAMP. (4) catechins prevent the adhesion of monocytes to the endothelium and migration transendotelial with inhibition of NF-kB, cytokines and adhesion molecules. (5) catechins inhibit cyclins, PDGF, TOD, JNK1, c-jun and MMPs. (6) agragasi catechins reduce platelet activity and intra-cellular Ca mobility reduction, PAF and arachidonic acid release and thromboxane A2 synthase .. Function - the function is very influential on the inhibition of atherosclerosis.
thankz :)
yunita i have question after read your material about "The capacity of flavonoids to act as antioxidants depends upon their molecular structure"
BalasHapusdescribe the various and different omolecular structures ?
and the structure of molecules which can act as antioxidants that are good?
Well I will try to answer your second questions,
BalasHapusBased on research that has developed compounds that have potential as an antioxidant is generally a compound flavonoids, phenolic and alkoloid.
antioxidants are compounds capable of inhibiting the oxidation of other molecules. the body does not have excessive antioxidative defense system, so if there is exposure to excessive radical, exogenous antioxidants your body needs.
concerns about the side effects of synthetic antioxidants make natural antioxidants as alternatives selected.
To get more information, I recommend you to open this link http://pasche08.files.wordpress.com/2009/05/copy-of-copy-of-makalah-quercetin-2003.pdf
thanks for your comment lina,,,,
The capacity of flavonoids to act as antioxidants depends upon their molecular structure. The position of hydroxyl groups and other features in the chemical structure of flavonoids are important for their antioxidant and free radical scavenging activities.
BalasHapushow the molecular structure of flavonoids when acting as an antioxidant?