4.7 Article

The Effects of Prunus spinosa L. Flower Extracts, Model Polyphenols and Phenolic Metabolites on Oxidative/Nitrative Modifications of Human Plasma Components with Particular Emphasis on Fibrinogen In Vitro

Journal

ANTIOXIDANTS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/antiox10040581

Keywords

Prunus spinosa; human plasma; fibrinogen; hemostasis; oxidative stress; peroxynitrite; cardiovascular diseases; antioxidants; polyphenols; metabolites

Funding

  1. National Science Centre, Poland [2017/27/N/NZ7/02074]
  2. University of Lodz, Poland [506/1136]

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The study showed that phytochemically standardized Prunus spinosa flower extracts, their primary native polyphenols, and potential phenolic metabolites can protect fibrinogen from structural changes under oxidative stress conditions induced by peroxynitrite, particularly reducing oxidation and nitration of amino acid residues and formation of high molecular weight aggregates. Low molecular weight polyphenols were found crucial for this protective activity.
Oxidative post-translational modifications of fibrinogen (a multifunctional blood plasma protein essential for hemostasis) are associated with the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disorders (CVDs). Prunus spinosa flower is a herbal medicine used in an adjuvant treatment of CVDs and rich in polyphenolic antioxidants. In the present study, phytochemically standardized P. spinosa flower extracts, their primary native polyphenols and potential phenolic metabolites were evaluated in vitro for their protective effects on fibrinogen (isolated and in the human plasma matrix) using a panel of complementary methods (SDS-PAGE, western blot, C-ELISA, fluorometry, FRAP, TBARS). The results revealed that the tested analytes at in vivo relevant levels (1-5 mu g/mL) considerably reduced the structural changes in the fibrinogen molecule under the oxidative stress conditions induced by peroxynitrite. In particular, they diminished the oxidation and/or nitration of amino acid residues, including tyrosine and tryptophan, as well as the formation of high molecular weight aggregates. The decrease in the levels of 3-nitrotyrosine was about 13.5-33.0% and 58.3-97.1% at 1 mu g/mL and 50 mu g/mL, respectively. The study indicated that low molecular weight polyphenols were crucial for the protective activity of the extracts toward fibrinogen and other human plasma components. The investigated model compounds effectively protected total plasma proteins and lipids against oxidative damage (by reducing the levels of 3-nitrotyrosine and thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances and normalizing/enhancing the non-enzymatic antioxidant capacity of plasma). The work provides insight into the role of native and metabolized polyphenols as contributory factors to the systemic activity of blackthorn flower extracts within the circulatory system.

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