Author(s):
Silva, João P.
; Gomes, A. C.
; Coutinho, O. P.
Date: 2008
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/1822/8689
Origin: RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
Subject(s): Oxidative DNA damage; Comet assay; Base excision repair (BER) assay; Polyphenolic compound; PC12 cell
Description
Biological systems are frequently exposed to excessive reactive oxygen species, causing a disturbance in the
cells natural antioxidant defence systems and resulting in damage to all biomolecules, including nucleic
acids. In fact, oxidative DNA damage is described as the type of damage most likely to occur in neuronal cells.
In this study, three polyphenolic compounds, luteolin, quercetin and rosmarinic acid, were investigated for
their protective effects against oxidative DNA damage induced in PC12 cells, a neuronal cell model. Although
luteolin and quercetin prevented the formation of strand breaks to a greater extent than rosmarinic acid, this
last one presented the highest capacity to repair strand breaks formation. In addition, rosmarinic acid was
the only compound tested that increased the repair of oxidized nucleotidic bases induced with the
photosensitizer compound [R]-1-[(10-chloro-4-oxo-3-phenyl-4H-benzo[a]quinolizin-1-yl) carbonyl]-2-pyrrolidine-
methanol (Ro 19-8022). The activity of repair enzymes was indicated by the in vitro base excision
repair assay, using a cell-free extract obtained from cells previously treated with the compounds to incise
DNA. The protective effect of rosmarinic acid was further confirmed by the increased expression of OGG1
repair gene, observed through real time RT-PCR. The data obtained is indicative that rosmarinic acid seems to
act on the intracellular mechanisms responsible for DNA repair, rather than by a direct effect on reactive
oxygen species scavenging, as deducted from the effects observed for luteolin and quercetin. Therefore, these
results suggest the importance of these polyphenols, and in particular rosmarinic acid, as protectors of
oxidative stress-induced DNA damage that commonly occurs in several pathological conditions, such as
neurodegenerative diseases.