44 research outputs found

    Application of Gas-Kinetic Scheme with Kinetic Boundary Conditions in Hypersonic Flow

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    Intestinal Absorption and First-Pass Metabolism of Polyphenol Compounds in Rat and Their Transport Dynamics in Caco-2 Cells

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    <div><h3>Background</h3><p>Polyphenols, a group of complex naturally occurring compounds, are widely distributed throughout the plant kingdom and are therefore readily consumed by humans. The relationship between their chemical structure and intestinal absorption, transport, and first-pass metabolism remains unresolved, however.</p> <h3>Methods</h3><p>Here, we investigated the intestinal absorption and first-pass metabolism of four polyphenol compounds, apigenin, resveratrol, emodin and chrysophanol, using the <em>in vitro</em> Caco-2 cell monolayer model system and <em>in situ</em> intestinal perfusion and <em>in vivo</em> pharmacokinetic studies in rats, so as to better understand the relationship between the chemical structure and biological fate of the dietary polyphenols.</p> <h3>Conclusion</h3><p>After oral administration, emodin and chrysophanol exhibited different absorptive and metabolic behaviours compared to apigenin and resveratrol. The differences in their chemical structures presumably resulted in differing affinities for drug-metabolizing enzymes, such as glucuronidase and sulphatase, and transporters, such as MRP2, SGLT1, and P-glycoprotein, which are found in intestinal epithelial cells.</p> </div

    DNA Oxidative Damage by Terpene Catechols as Analogues of Natural Terpene Quinone Methide Precursors in the Presence of Cu(II) and/or NADH

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    Natural terpene quinone methides (QM) and their derivatives have been investigated as therapeutics due to their broad antifungal, antibacterial, and antitumor activities. Recently, we reported that a terpene QM was formed from the catechol precursor through the disproportionation of Cu(II)/(I) redox cycle, and extensive DNA damage was observed throughout the oxidation process. In this paper, we investigate DNA damage with a series of terpene catechols as analogues of natural QM precursors and suggest that reactive oxygen species (ROS) are responsible for the observed DNA damage in the Cu2+-induced oxidation despite the stereo- and structural difference of these catechol or subsequent oxidation products. In addition, the presence of NADH significantly enhanced the extent of DNA damage by oxidation of these catechols. Especially with alkene catechols 6−7, the extent of DNA damage was independent of the concentration of catechols, implying that NADH enables the continuous production of ROS through the redox cycle of catechols/quinones
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