Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-m9kch Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-02T10:04:16.528Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Comparison of catechin profiles in human plasma and urine after single dosing and regular intake of green tea (Camellia sinensis)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 October 2012

Shing-Tack Fung
Affiliation:
Department of Health Technology and Informatics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Cyrus K. Ho
Affiliation:
Department of Health Technology and Informatics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Siu-Wai Choi
Affiliation:
Department of Health Technology and Informatics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Wai-Yuen Chung
Affiliation:
Department of Health Technology and Informatics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong
Iris F. F. Benzie*
Affiliation:
Department of Health Technology and Informatics, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon, Hong Kong
*
*Corresponding author: Professor Iris Benzie, email iris.benzie@polyu.edu.hk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Green tea (Camellia sinensis) catechin profiles in plasma and urine following single dosing and regular ingestion of green tea are not clear. We performed a placebo-controlled intervention study with sixteen healthy volunteers to determine changes in total and free catechins after a single dose and following 1 week of twice-daily green tea. Blood and urine samples were collected before (fasting) and after (60 and 120 min for blood; 90 and 180 min for urine) drinking 200 ml of 1·5 % (w/v) green tea or water (n 8 each), and fasting samples were again collected after 7 d of 150 ml of 1 % (w/v) supplemental green tea or water twice daily. After a 4-week washout, subjects were crossed onto the other treatment and procedures repeated. Plasma results at 1 h post-ingestion showed elevated (P< 0·05) mean epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG; 310 (sd 117) nmol/l; all in free form), epigallocatechin (EGC; 192 (sd 67) nmol/l; 30 % free) and epicatechin gallate (ECG; 134 (sd 51) nmol/l; 75 % free). Fasting plasma after 7 d of regular intake showed increased (P< 0·05) EGCG (80 v. 15 nmol/l at baseline) and ECG (120 v. 40 nmol/l), with ≥ 90 % of both in their conjugated forms. Total EGC was < 10 nmol/l. Post-ingestion conjugation and renal loss of EGC and epicatechin were rapid and high, but were negligible for EGCG and ECG. In the green tea consumed, the content was EGCG >EGC >ECG, and the acute plasma response mirrored this. However, after chronic consumption there was almost no EGC found in fasting plasma, some EGCG was present, but a rather high level of ECG was maintained.

Type
Full Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2012 

Green tea (Camellia sinensis) is reported to have various beneficial effects on health(Reference Wang, Gong and Yan1Reference Yang, Lambert and Sang3). Green tea is rich (35 % of dry weight) in catechins, a family of polyphenolic flavon-3-ols, and these are the putative bioactive agents(Reference Khan and Mukhtar2Reference Williamson and Manach4). The major catechin (about 60–70 %) in green tea is epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG), but there are also substantial amounts of epigallocatechin (EGC), epicatechin gallate (ECG) and epicatechin (EC)(Reference Khan and Mukhtar2Reference Williamson and Manach4). In vitro studies have demonstrated the powerful antioxidant properties of catechins, particularly EGCG(Reference Yang, Lambert and Sang3Reference Benzie and Szeto6), and human studies have shown that the plasma total antioxidant capacity increases shortly after the ingestion of green tea(Reference Yang, Lambert and Sang3, Reference Higdon and Frei5, Reference Benzie, Szeto and Tomlinson7). However, poor gastrointestinal absorption, rapid phase II metabolism and urinary excretion of conjugated catechins severely limits their bioavailability and, thereby, their biological effects(Reference Williamson and Manach4, Reference Higdon and Frei5, Reference Lee, Maliakal and Chen8Reference Del Rio, Calani and Cordero10). Including the absorption (assessed by their urinary excretion) of ring fission catechin metabolites produced from colonic bacteria increases ‘catechin’ bioavailability to about 40 % (ranging from < 3 to 100 %), but interindividual differences in urinary concentrations of these metabolites are very large, and their physiological relevance is currently unknown(Reference Stalmach, Troufflard and Serafini9Reference Chow, Cai and Hakim15).

In human subjects, a single dose of green tea, tea solids or purified catechins results in an increase in plasma catechins that peaks at 1–2 h post-ingestion(Reference Williamson and Manach4, Reference Higdon and Frei5, Reference Lee, Maliakal and Chen8Reference Del Rio, Calani and Cordero10, Reference Yang, Chen and Lee13Reference Renouf, Guy and Marmet17). However, it is not clear if EGC or EGCG is the predominant catechin in plasma shortly following tea ingestion, or if ECG and EC are present. Further, the profile of free and conjugated catechins in plasma and urine in the acute post-absorption phase is not clear. EGCG appears to escape rapid conjugation and excretion, but other catechins in plasma are found mainly in their sulfated and glucuronated forms, and catechins absorbed from a single dose of tea are reportedly removed from plasma within 24 h(Reference Stalmach, Troufflard and Serafini9, Reference Del Rio, Calani and Cordero10, Reference Yang, Chen and Lee13, Reference Russell and Duthie14, Reference Renouf, Guy and Marmet17). In addition, it is not yet clear if free or conjugated catechins accumulate in plasma with the regular intake of green tea, or if the baseline (fasting) plasma and urine catechins profiles following the regular intake of green tea are different from those after a single dose. Answering these questions would add to our knowledge of which native or biotransformed components of green tea might be responsible for the health benefits of the regular intake of green tea in the diet, and could help guide dietary recommendations for health promotion. In the present study, acute (up to 2 h in plasma and 3 h in urine) responses in total and free catechins (EGCG, EGC, ECG, EC and catechin) in healthy adults were determined after a single dose of green tea, as well as fasting plasma and urine total and free catechins in the same subjects after 7 d of twice-daily green tea intake.

Methods and materials

Study design

The present study was a placebo-controlled human intervention trial of cross-over design. A total of sixteen (four men, twelve women) healthy, non-obese volunteers aged 35–50 years were recruited. The present study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki and all procedures involving human subjects were approved by the Human Subjects Ethics Sub-committee of The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects. Subjects were non-smokers, free from hypertension, did not take regular medication or antioxidant or vitamin supplements, and had no previous history of serious illness or hospitalisation during the previous 12 months. Volunteers who reported having taken any kind of prescribed medication, including antibiotics, in the previous 3 months were excluded from the study. Subjects were not vegetarians or regular (daily) tea drinkers, though some took tea occasionally. Of the sixteen subjects, fifteen were of Chinese ethnicity and one was Caucasian. Female volunteers were excluded if pregnant, lactating or on hormone replacement therapy. All volunteers provided written informed consent before commencing the study.

Sample collection and treatments

Each of the sixteen volunteers was allocated non-selectively to a first treatment of tea (n 8) or water (n 8). On day 1, venous blood (collected into heparinised collection tubes) and urine samples (‘spot’ urine, collected into plain containers without preservative) were collected before (fasting) and at timed intervals (60 and 120 min for blood, 90 and 180 min for urine) after a single dose (200 ml of 1·5 %, w/v) of freshly prepared green tea, or the same volume of hot water as the control treatment. In addition, fasting blood and urine samples were collected after 1 week (i.e. on day 8) of regular consumption of green tea (150 ml of 1 % (w/v) green tea twice daily, except for the first dose used in the acute study as described above) or the same dose of hot water. After a 4-week washout period, each subject was crossed over onto the other treatment and the procedures of days 1–8 were repeated.

Subjects were requested to maintain their usual diet throughout the study, except for the two additional cups of tea or water per d. The green tea used (Longjing ‘pre-rain’ green tea) was kindly provided by the Ying Kee Tea House, Hong Kong. Subjects were provided with cups (with a mark denoting 150 ml volume), a week's supply of tea bags, and instructions on how to prepare and take their tea twice daily. The tea bags were prepared by the investigators and each contained 1·5 g of Longjing green tea leaves. Volunteers were given verbal and written instructions to add one tea bag to the cup containing freshly boiled water (added to the 150 ml mark), gently agitate the tea bag in the water for 3 min, then remove and discard the tea bag. The volunteers were instructed to drink the freshly prepared tea within 20 min. Compliance was assessed by regular inquiry and by counting returned tea bags at the end of the intervention period: return of < 20 % of tea bags that should have been consumed (i.e. 80 % compliance) was regarded as satisfactory. The investigators performing the laboratory analysis were not informed of the order of treatment for each participant, but the volunteers unavoidably knew when they took tea or water, making this a single-blinded study.

Sample handling, workup, and catechin measurement

Blood and urine samples were centrifuged (3000 g for 10 min) within a few minutes of collection. Plasma and urine samples were sampled and stored at − 80°C until thawed (once only) for catechin analysis. The creatinine concentration of each urine sample was measured on the day of collection by a commercial kit method (Biosystems). Urine catechin concentration was standardised to that of creatinine to correct for differences in water content.

Total and free EGCG, EGC, ECG, EC and catechin were measured in plasma and urine samples using HPLC with tandem MS (HPLC-MS/MS), based on published protocols with some modification(Reference Yang, Chen and Lee13, Reference Cordero, Canale and Del Rio18). All reagents used were of the highest purity grade available. EGCG, EC, ECG, EGC, catechin and taxifolin (internal standard), ascorbic acid, ammonium acetate, acetonitrile, EDTA disodium salt dihydrate, acetic acid, β-glucuronidase (type VII-A from Escherichia coli; 5 292 000 units/g) and sulfatase (type H-1 from Helix pomatia; 24 954 units/g) were from Sigma-Aldrich. Methanol, sodium dihydrogen orthophosphate dihydrate and disodium hydrogen phosphate were from BDH. Samples of thawed plasma and urine (100 μl) were stabilised by adding 10 μl of 10 % aqueous ascorbic acid containing 0·1 % EDTA–Na2.2H2O (w/v) and then subjected to enzyme pre-treatment (for measurement of total (conjugated plus free) catechin measurement) by adding 10 μl of β-glucuronidase buffer (containing 240 units in 0·1 m-aqueous Na2HPO4 (pH 6·8)) and 10 μl of sulfatase buffer (containing 20 units in pH 6·8), after which 25 μl of diluent A (2 % aqueous ascorbic acid containing 0·1 % EDTA–Na2.2H2O (w/v) in a solution containing 0·4 m-NaH2PO4 (pH 3·6), methanol and water in a ratio of 10:10:80, by vol.) and 25 μl of internal standard (0·2 μm-taxifolin in diluent A) were added, and the mixture was incubated at 37°C for 45 min. In order to extract catechins and precipitate protein from samples, 250 μl chilled methanol was added after samples had been cooling in ice-water for 1 min. The mixtures were then vortexed and returned to the ice-water for 5 min, followed by centrifugation at 4°C, 15 000 g for 10 min. The methanol fraction containing the catechins (150 μl of the supernatant fraction) was collected and mixed with 100 μl 4·75 mm-aqueous ammonium acetate (pH 4·5) before HPLC-MS/MS analysis. For samples without enzyme treatment (free catechin measurement), 20 μl of 0·1 m-aqueous Na2HPO4 (pH 6·8) was added instead of β-glucuronidase and sulfatase buffer solutions, and the incubation at 37°C for 45 min was waived.

Free and total EGCG, EGC, ECG, EC and catechin of the test samples and of a typical 1·5 % (w/v) infusion of green tea were measured using an HPLC system (Agilent 1200 Series, G1311A quaternary pump and G1322A micro vacuum degasser) equipped with a thermostatted well-plate autosampler (G1329A; set at 4°C) linked to a 3200 QTRAP® mass spectrometer (Applied Biosystems/MDS Sciex). MS/MS analysis was performed in negative ion mode with a TurboIonSpray® source. Gradient HPLC separations were performed on a Waters Symmetry column (C18; 3·5 μm; 4·6 mm × 150 mm) protected with a Sentry Guard column (C18; 5 μm; 3·9 mm × 20 mm). Column temperature was at room temperature (21·5°C) with mobile phase A (5 % acetonitrile and 95 % 2 mm-aqueous ammonium acetate (v/v, adjusted to pH 4·5 with acetic acid)) and mobile phase B (95 % acetonitrile and 5 % 20 mm-aqueous ammonium acetate (v/v, pH 4·5)). Both solutions were filtered through a 0·22 μm Millipore filter before use. Gradient HPLC separations were performed, starting with 100 % mobile phase A, and linearly ramping to 90 % A/10 % B in 1 min, then to 82 % A/18 % B in another 13·5 min, to 58 % A/42 % B in 3 min, to 20 % A/80 % B in 2·5 min and finally, by an immediate increase in 0·1 min, to 100 % A and keeping this for a 4·9 min equilibrating period. The flow rate was constant at 0·5 ml/min. The injection volume was 50 μl. A typical overlay (with all detecting channels) chromatogram is shown in Fig. 1. In the mass spectrometer, calibration, control and sample data were obtained by multiple reactions monitoring acquisition with standard precursor ions ([M-H], Q1) and product ions (Q3) (Table 1). All the product ions were quantified using a dwell time of 150 ms/channel with unit mass resolution for Q1 and Q3 (Table 1). The source parameters were set as follows: curtain gas (N2), 12·0 psi (pounds per square inch); collision gas (N2), medium; ionspray voltage, − 4500 V; temperature, 650°C; ion source gas 1 (air), 40·0 psi; ion source gas 2 (air), 40·0 psi; interface heater, on. The parameters for the optimised compound were: declustering potential, − 50·0 V; entrance potential, − 4·0 V; collision energy, − 30·0 eV; collision cell entrance potential, 22·0 V; collision cell exit potential, − 1·0 V. All data were acquired and manually processed by Analyst® Software 1.4.2 (AB Sciex). The limit of detection was determined, using the same HPLC-MS/MS conditions as for the test samples, by direct injection of each methanolic catechin pure solution and the concentration that gave three times the signal:noise ratio was taken as the limit of detection. The limit of detection was determined from the chromatogram by the Analyst software, which determines which region contains the peak and the noise based on maximum intensities in each selection, subtracts the average background signal intensity from the background and divides the subtracted signal by the peak-to-peak noise level. The concentration that gave ten times the signal:noise ratio was taken as the limit of quantification. Using this HPLC-MS/MS method, we found limits of quantification (in nmol/l) of: EGCG, 3·6 nmol/l; EGC, 7·3 nmol/l; EC, 58·3 nmol/l; ECG, 1·8 nmol/l; catechin, 58·3. Catechin concentrations were calculated by corresponding peak area ratios (standard/internal standard) compared with the external standard and using the calibration curves generated by injecting 0·78 to 25·0 μmol/l for catechin, EC, EGCG and ECG, and 1·56 to 50·0 μmol/l for EGC in plasma-based calibration, and 1·56 to 50·0 μmol/l for catechin, EC, EGCG and ECG, and 12·5 to 400·0 μmol/l for EGC in urine-based calibration.

Fig. 1 Typical catechin overlay chromatogram showing elution patterns of epigallocatechin (9·4 min), catechin (11·2 min), epicatechin (13·6 min), epigallocatechin gallate (14·4 min), epicatechin gallate (21·0 min) and the internal standard (21·6 min). For details of m/z, see Table 1. Eluates were diverted to waste for the first 8 min.

Table 1 Standard precursor ions (Q1) and product ions (Q3) for catechins*

* The conditions for the mass spectrometer were: curtain gas (N2), 12·0 pounds per square inch (psi); collision gas (N2), medium; ionspray voltage, − 4500 V; temperature, 650°C; ion source gas 1 (air), 40·0 psi; ion source gas 2 (air), 40·0 psi; interface heater, on; declustering potential, − 50·0 V; entrance potential, − 4·0 V; collision energy, − 30·0 eV; collision cell entrance potential, 22·0 V; collision cell exit potential, − 1·0 V.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analysis was carried out using GraphPad Prism 5 (GraphPad Software). The normality of data was analysed with the Kolmogorov–Smirnov test. Data with a normal distribution were analysed using paired t tests and repeated-measures ANOVA with Tukey's post hoc test for comparing differences between two and three groups, respectively. Skewed data were analysed using the Wilcoxon matched-pairs signed rank test and the Friedman test with the Bonferroni post hoc test. A P value (two-sided) of < 0·05 was regarded as statistically significant. For ease of comparison, only the within-treatment results for tea are shown; however, in statistical analysis the comparisons were also made across treatments (i.e. tea v. water).

Results

The catechin content of the typical 1·5 % (w/v) infusion of Longjing pre-rain green tea and the calculated content of the infusions used for the acute and daily supplement are shown in Table 2.

Table 2 Catechin content of a typical 1·5 % (w/v) infusion of the tea (Longjin ‘pre-rain’ green tea; Camellia sinensis) used in the acute study, with the calculated catechin content of the doses used for the acute intake and daily supplement

EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate; EGC, epigallocatechin; ECG, epicatechin gallate; EC, epicatechin; C, catechin.

Plasma catechins after single dosing and 7 d of green tea supplementation are presented in Table 3. In plasma at 1 h post-ingestion, EGCG, EGC, ECG and EC were significantly increased (P< 0·05) compared with baseline (fasting) and with the timed-matched values after ingestion of water. Plasma total catechins averaged about 650 nmol/l at 1 h post-ingestion, representing a 10-fold increase over fasting values. The largest contributor (40–50 %) to the increase seen 1 h post-ingestion was EGCG, all of which was in the free form. The next largest increase was in EGC (which comprised about 25–30 % of total catechins in post-ingestion plasma), most of which (70–80 %) was in the conjugated form, followed by ECG (20 % of total catechins in post-ingestion plasma), most of which (75 %) was in the free form. Only four of the sixteen subjects had detectable EC in 1 h post-ingestion plasma, and this was all in the conjugated form. No catechin was detected in post-ingestion plasma. The 2 h post-ingestion levels of EGCG, EGC and ECG remained elevated (P< 0·05), with EGCG remaining predominantly in the free form at 2 h, but a larger fraction of ECG was in the conjugated form (about 50 % v. about 25 % at 1 h). In fasting samples collected after 7 d of green tea supplementation, a significant (P< 0·05) increase in fasting plasma EGCG was seen (from about 16 nmol/l at baseline and with placebo treatment, to about 80 nmol/l after 7 d of green tea treatment). However, the increase was modest in comparison with the marked rise in EGCG seen in the acute study (peak concentration about 300 nmol/l), and almost 90 % of the EGCG was in the conjugated form, in contrast to the acute post-ingestion increase, which was all in the free form. Total ECG concentrations after 7 d supplementation with green tea had increased 3-fold (from about 40 to about 120 nmol/l; P< 0·05), but ECG was also predominantly (>95 %) in the conjugated form. Total EGC was very low (and undetectable in eleven of the sixteen subjects), with no free EGC found, and no EC or catechin was found in day 8 fasting plasma.

Table 3 Plasma catechins (nmol/l) after a single dose of 200 ml of 1 % (w/v) green tea and following 7 d of regular intake of 2×150 ml of 1 % (w/v) green tea (Camellia sinensis) (Mean values and standard deviations, medians and ranges; n 16)

EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate; EGC, epigallocatechin; ECG, epicatechin gallate; EC, epicatechin; C, catechin.

* Mean value was significantly different from that at baseline and from the time-matched placebo result (P< 0·05).

Urine results are presented in Table 4. Following a single dose of tea, the concentration of EGC in urine was markedly higher (P< 0·05) in the 90 min samples, and a similar level of EGC excretion was seen in the 180 min urine samples. Significantly (P< 0·05) increased EC was also found in the 90 and 180 min urines, but interindividual variation was very wide. Very small, though statistically significant (P< 0·05), increases in conjugated EGCG and ECG were seen in urine at 90 or 120 min post-ingestion. In day 8 fasting urines, the predominant catechin present was conjugated EGC (at concentrations that were markedly higher than in day 1 fasting urines and in 7 d urines after placebo treatment; P< 0·05). EC in urine after 7 d of green tea intake showed very high interindividual variation and was not statistically significantly different (P>0·05) from baseline or after placebo. The day 8 fasting urine concentrations of total EGCG and ECG were higher (P< 0·05) than on day 1, but the amounts were very small (averaging ≤ 5 nmol/l).

Table 4 Urine total catechins (nmol/mmol creatinine) after a single dose and after 7 d of twice-daily intake of green tea (Camellia sinensis) (Mean values and standard deviations, medians and ranges; n 16)

EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate; EGC, epigallocatechin; ECG, epicatechin gallate; EC, epicatechin.

* Mean value was significantly different from that at baseline and from the time-matched placebo result (P< 0·05).

In regard to the amount of each catechin in the green tea ingested in the acute study and each day for 7 d, the rank order was: ECGC (214 μmol ingested) >EGC (114 μmol ingested) >ECG = EC (about 45 μmol ingested) >catechin (8 μmol ingested).

Discussion

There is growing evidence of the health benefits of a regular intake of green tea, which include hypotensive, anti-carcinogenic, detoxification, anti-inflammatory, lipid-lowering and anti-obesity effects(Reference Wang, Gong and Yan1Reference Higdon and Frei5, Reference Han, Wong and Benzie19Reference Nikaidou, Ishizuka and Maeda25). To date, the catechins have attracted most interest in the study of green tea and health, though it is noted that other components of green tea, including caffeine, vitamin C, theanine, saponins and γ-aminobutyric acid, may contribute to health promotion(Reference Westerterp-Plantenga2426). Furthermore, there is growing awareness that colonic metabolites of catechins can be absorbed in relatively large amounts(Reference Del Rio, Calani and Cordero10Reference Calani, Del Rio and Callegari12), and that at least some of the many microbiological-derived phenolic metabolites detected in human plasma and urine have biological activity in vitro (Reference Monagas, Urpi-Sarda and Sánchez-Patán27). The identity of the flavan-3-ol-metabolising microbes and the bioactivity of the actual conjugated forms of microbial metabolites found in plasma are not yet known, and further study is needed in this important area to elucidate the potentially important biological role of microbial-mediated catabolism of polyphenols in tea, coffee, wine and berries(Reference Russell and Duthie14, Reference Monagas, Urpi-Sarda and Sánchez-Patán27Reference Williamson and Clifford29).

Bioavailability of green tea catechins in their ‘native’ form (i.e. not as colonic metabolites) is low, the type and form (native or biotransformed) of catechin(s) responsible for the health benefits of green tea are not yet confirmed, and it is not known if health-related effects are due to recurring ‘waves’ of short-term effects of freshly absorbed catechins or catechin metabolites, or to more ‘chronic’ effects of catechins (or their metabolites) that have accumulated with regular intake. It is also unclear if health-related effects are due to the antioxidant or the putative pro-oxidant activities of green tea polyphenols(Reference Lambert and Elias21, Reference Serafini, Del Rio, N'Dri, Benzie and Wachtel-Galor22). Polyphenols could act via different mechanisms, such as carcinogen inactivation, altering gene expression, or modulating intracellular signalling cascades and redox switches involving, for example, NF-κB, mitogen-activated protein (MAP) kinases or nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2 (Nrf2)(Reference Serafini, Del Rio, N'Dri, Benzie and Wachtel-Galor22, Reference Monagas, Urpi-Sarda and Sánchez-Patán27, Reference Benzie and Wachtel-Galor30Reference Fraga and Oteiza32).

The present study investigated and compared the catechin profiles in plasma and urine following a single dose and after 1 week of supplementation with green tea. Results showed that 1–2 h after a single dose of green tea ingestion there was a marked increase in plasma EGCG, and the increase was all in free EGCG. Plasma EGC and ECG also increased significantly after ingestion. For ECG, the increase was mostly due to free ECG. For EGC, most of the increase was in the conjugated form. Urine collected at 1·5 and 3 h post-ingestion contained markedly increased amounts of conjugated EGC and conjugated EC, but EGCG and ECG were almost undetectable. Assuming 3 litres of circulating plasma, the 1 h EGCG concentration in plasma (310 nmol/l) represents 0·14 % of the dose ingested, all was in the free form and negligible amounts were entering the urine. For EGC, the 1 h concentration of 192 nmol/l (total) represents 0·17 % of the dose, but only 30 % of this (0·05 % of the amount ingested) was in the free form, and early renal loss of EGC was high. For ECG, the 1 h concentration (134 nmol/l) represents 0·3 % of the dose, about 75 % of this was circulating in the free form, and, as with EGCG, negligible amounts were found in urine at up to 3 h post-ingestion. The 1 h EC concentration (16 nmol/l) represents < 0·05 % of the dose ingested, none was in the free form, and, as for EGC, renal loss was rapid. Based on these figures, the ‘efficiency’ of absorption from a single dose of green tea with subsequent release into the plasma (‘bioavailability’) for catechins in the free form was highest for EGCG in absolute terms, but in relative terms a higher fraction of ingested ECG was circulating in post-ingestion plasma. The actual fraction of the dose absorbed will be higher if partitioning into extracellular fluids and tissue uptake occurs quickly after ingestion. In terms of conjugated catechins, about 0·12 % of the ingested dose of EGC was conjugated and circulating in the plasma at 1 h post-ingestion, the figure for EC was < 0·03 %, and that for ECG was 0·075 %. However, despite renal loss, the 2 h plasma levels of EGC and EC were similar to the 1 h levels. This suggests ongoing absorption (and conjugation) of ECG and EC. Interestingly, the plasma levels of EGCG and ECG were also similar at 2 h to those at 1 h post-ingestion, despite negligible renal loss of these catechins. However, if EGC and EC continue to be absorbed between 1 and 2 h post-ingestion, this is likely to be the case for ECGC and ECG also. Why, then, did plasma levels of EGCG and EC remain steady between 1 and 2 h post-ingestion? One reason could be biliary excretion; another could be tissue uptake.

There is some evidence from animal and cell culture studies of tissue uptake of catechins. In pregnant rats fed green tea extract, EGCG was taken up more readily into fetal tissues than other catechins in the extract(Reference Chu, Wang and Chu33), and EGCG was found in the prostate and liver of CF-1 mice fed pure EGCG(Reference Lambert, Lee and Diamond34). A concentration-dependent uptake of EGCG into cultured human colon cancer cells has also been reported(Reference Lambert, Lee and Diamond34). Human data are scarce, but in prostate cancer patients (n 8) who took six cups of green tea daily for up to 6 weeks before radical prostatectomy, EGCG in its methylated and free forms was found in prostate tissue(Reference Wang, Aronson and Huang35). ECG was also present in prostate tissue, but in lower amounts(Reference Wang, Aronson and Huang35). Notably, the authors found that most of the EGCG and other green tea polyphenols found intracellularly were not conjugated, though some was in the methylated form(Reference Wang, Aronson and Huang35). Therefore, it appears that unconjugated EGCG and ECG can enter cells. Unfortunately, due to technical difficulties, we did not measure methylated forms of catechins in plasma or urine. However, no methylated EGCG or ECG has been found in metabolite profiling studies on human subjects(Reference Stalmach, Troufflard and Serafini9, Reference Del Rio, Calani and Cordero10, Reference Sang, Lee and Yang36). Methylated EGCG was found in cultured prostate cancer cells treated with EGCG, but it was reported that methylation lowered the inhibitory effects of EGCG on cell growth and NF-κB activation, and lowered induction of apoptosis in the cancer cells(Reference Wang, Aronson and Huang35). These data imply that methylation of EGCG is an intracellular event that ‘traps’ and lowers the bioactivity of EGCG. It is not known if this applies also to ECG, the other catechin that escapes conjugation and rapid renal excretion.

From the acute response data presented here it appears that EGCG and ECG are absorbed more readily than other catechins, entering the plasma soon after ingestion, and escaping rapid conjugation and renal loss. This makes them more ‘bioavailable’ for tissue uptake. In contrast, EGC and EC, which are also absorbed quite quickly after ingestion, are rapidly conjugated and excreted in the urine, making them less ‘bioavailable’, although their absorption and conjugation appear to continue for at least 2 h after tea ingestion, maintaining their plasma levels during this period despite high renal loss. With regular intake of green tea, EGCG and ECG in fasting plasma accumulate to some extent, reaching levels 3- to 5-fold higher than baseline; the fasting plasma EGCG concentration after 7 d of twice-daily intake was only about 25 % of that reached 1 h after a cup of tea was ingested (about 300 nmol/l), while the ECG concentration was similar to the peak plasma level reached in the acute study (about 130 nmol/l), despite there being much less ECG in the tea. Almost no EGC was found in post-supplementation fasting plasma (though a small amount was found in urine), despite the significant increase seen in the acute study and the EGC content of the tea being double that of ECG. Notably, the accumulated EGCG and ECG were predominantly in their conjugated forms, but only trace amounts of EGCG and ECG were found in post-supplementation fasting urine. Therefore, it is not simply conjugation that determines renal loss. The fate of conjugated EGCG and ECG is not known, but may be biliary excretion. In contrast to EGCG and ECG, there was no accumulation of EGC and EC in plasma with the regular intake of green tea, most likely because of rapid conjugation and renal excretion of each ingested dose; however, as previously reported(Reference Wang, Aronson and Huang35) and confirmed in the present study, some EGC and EC are present in fasting urine after chronic intake of green tea.

There have been several previous studies that have investigated acute post-absorption changes (‘bioavailability’) in plasma catechins after ingestion of green tea or green tea extract ingestion(Reference Lee, Maliakal and Chen8Reference Yang, Chen and Lee13, Reference Chow, Cai and Hakim15Reference Cordero, Canale and Del Rio18, Reference Sang, Lee and Yang36, Reference Chow, Hakin and Vining37). Study design and methodology have differed between studies, most were small (n < 10), and conjugated and free catechins were often not differentiated, but bioavailability figures across all the studies were low, although a 3·5-fold increase in bioavailability was reported when tea polyphenols were taken in the fasting state and without co-ingestion of food(Reference Chow, Hakin and Vining37). Despite the study differences, the results of acute response studies are consistent in that they show post-ingestion ‘waves’ of increased amounts of catechins in the plasma. The present study confirms that more EGCG is absorbed in absolute terms from green tea, but that ECG is relatively better absorbed, that both EGCG and ECG escape rapid conjugation and renal loss, and that with regular intake of green tea the levels of EGCG and ECG are significantly increased in fasting plasma, with quite high levels of ECG maintained, although the increase is due mainly to the conjugated forms of EGCG and ECG and is modest for EGCG. However, despite conjugation there are negligible amounts of EGCG and ECG in urine. In contrast, EGC and EC are rapidly conjugated and excreted, and we saw no evidence that they accumulate in plasma with regular tea drinking.

The present study has several limitations. We did not measure the methylated forms of catechins. Methylated EC and EGC sulfates and glucuronides have been found in plasma and urine, but no methylated EGCG or ECG has been reported(Reference Stalmach, Troufflard and Serafini9, Reference Del Rio, Calani and Cordero10, Reference Sang, Lee and Yang36). Also, we have not yet studied changes in biomarkers that could be affected by acute or chronic green tea intake, such as gene activation, lipids, or inflammatory or oxidative stress biomarkers. We will address some of these issues in follow-up studies.

In conclusion, significant increases in plasma EGCG, EGC and ECG were seen in the acute study. Post-ingestion conjugation and renal loss of EGC and EC were rapid and high, but were negligible for EGCG and ECG. In the green tea consumed, the content of EGCG >EGC> ECG, and the acute plasma response mirrored this. However, after chronic consumption there was almost no EGC found in fasting plasma, some EGCG was present, but a rather high level of ECG was maintained.

Acknowledgements

The present study was financially supported by The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. The green tea used was kindly supplied by Ying Kee Tea House, Hong Kong. The contribution of each author to the manuscript and work described was as follows: C. K. H., S.-W. C. and I. F. F. B. were responsible for the planning of the study; S.-T. F. and W.-Y. C. performed the HPLC-MS/MS work, and were responsible for catechin data acquisition and statistical analysis; C. K. H. and S.-W. C. recruited and liaised with volunteers, prepared the supplement, and were responsible for sample collection, creatinine measurements and initial sample workup; I. F. F. B. was responsible for the ethics application, treatment allocation, and overall supervision of the work; all authors contributed to the interpretation of results and preparation of the final manuscript. The authors have no conflicts of interest.

References

1Wang, QM, Gong, QY, Yan, JJ, et al. (2010) Association between green tea intake and coronary artery disease in a Chinese population. Circ J 74, 294300.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2Khan, N & Mukhtar, H (2007) Tea polyphenols for health promotion. Life Sci 81, 519533.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3Yang, CS, Lambert, JD & Sang, S (2009) Antioxidative and anti-carcinogenic activities of tea polyphenols. Arch Toxicol 83, 1121.Google Scholar
4Williamson, G & Manach, C (2005) Bioavailability and bioefficacy of polyphenols in humans II. Review of 93 intervention studies. Am J Clin Nutr 81, 243S255S.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
5Higdon, JV & Frei, B (2003) Tea catechins and polyphenols: health effects, metabolism, and antioxidant functions. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr 43, 89143.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
6Benzie, IFF & Szeto, YT (1999) Total antioxidant capacity of teas by the ferric reducing/antioxidant power (FRAP) assay. J Agric Food Chem 47, 633637.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
7Benzie, IFF, Szeto, YT, Tomlinson, B, et al. (1999) Consumption of green tea causes rapid increase in plasma antioxidant power in humans. Nutr Cancer 34, 8387.Google Scholar
8Lee, MJ, Maliakal, P, Chen, L, et al. (2002) Pharmacokinetics of tea catechins after ingestion of green tea and (–)-epigallocatechin-3-gallate by humans: formation of different metabolites and individual variability. Cancer Epidemiol Biomark Prev 11, 10251032.Google Scholar
9Stalmach, A, Troufflard, S, Serafini, M, et al. (2009) Absorption, metabolism and excretion of Choladi green tea flavan-3-ols by humans. Mol Nutr Food Res 53, S44S53.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
10Del Rio, D, Calani, L, Cordero, C, et al. (2010) Bioavailability and catabolism of green tea flavan-3-ols in humans. Nutrition 26, 11101116.Google Scholar
11Roowi, S, Stalmach, A, Mullen, W, et al. (2010) Green tea flavan-3-ols: colonic degradation and urinary excretion of catabolites by humans. J Agric Food Chem 58, 12961304.Google Scholar
12Calani, L, Del Rio, D, Callegari, L, et al. (2012) Updated bioavailability and 48h excretion profile of flavan-3-ols from green tea in humans. Int J Food Sci Nutr 63, 513521.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13Yang, C, Chen, L, Lee, MJ, et al. (1998) Blood and urine levels of tea catechins after ingestion of different amounts of green tea by human volunteers. Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 7, 351354.Google ScholarPubMed
14Russell, W & Duthie, G (2011) Plant secondary metabolites and gut health: the case for phenolic acids. Proc Nutr Soc 70, 389396.Google Scholar
15Chow, HH, Cai, Y, Hakim, IA, et al. (2003) Pharmacokinetics and safety of green tea polyphenols after multiple-dose administration of epigallocatechin gallate and Polyphenon E in healthy individuals. Clin Cancer Res 9, 33123319.Google Scholar
16Müller, N, Ellinger, S, Alteheld, B, et al. (2010) Bolus ingestion of white and green tea increases the concentration of several flavon-3-ols in plasma, but does not affect markers of oxidative stress in healthy non-smokers. Mol Nutr Food Res 54, 16361645.Google Scholar
17Renouf, M, Guy, P, Marmet, C, et al. (2011) Plasma appearance and correlation between coffee and green tea metabolites in human subjects. Br J Nutr 104, 16351640.Google Scholar
18Cordero, C, Canale, F, Del Rio, D, et al. (2009) Identification, quantitation, and method validation for flavan-3-ols in fermented ready-to-drink teas from the Italian market using HPLC-UV/DAD and LC-MS/MS. J Sep Sci 32, 36433651.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
19Han, KC, Wong, WC & Benzie, IFF (2011) Genoprotective effects of green tea (Camellia sinensis) in humans: results of a controlled supplementation trial. Br J Nutr 105, 171179.Google Scholar
20Jochmann, N, Baumann, G & Stangl, V (2008) Green tea and cardiovascular disease: from molecular targets towards human health. Curr Opin Clin Nutr Metab Care 11, 758765.Google Scholar
21Lambert, JD & Elias, RJ (2010) The antioxidant and pro-oxidant activities of green tea polyphenols: a role in cancer prevention. Arch Biochem Biophys 50, 6672.Google Scholar
22Serafini, M, Del Rio, D, N'Dri, YD, et al. (2011) Health benefits of tea. In Herbal Medicine: Biomolecular and Clinical Aspects, 2nd ed., pp. 239262 [Benzie, IFF and Wachtel-Galor, S, editors]. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press Taylor and Francis Group.Google Scholar
23Brown, AL, Lane, J, Coverly, J, et al. (2008) Effects of dietary supplementation with green tea polyphenol epigallocatechin-3-gallate on insulin resistance and associated metabolic risk factors: randomized trial. Br J Nutr 101, 886894.Google Scholar
24Westerterp-Plantenga, MS (2010) Green tea catechins, caffeine and body-weight regulation. Physiol Behav 100, 4246.Google Scholar
25Nikaidou, S, Ishizuka, M, Maeda, Y, et al. (2005) Effect of components of green tea extracts, caffeine and catechins on hepatic drug metabolizing enzyme activities and mutagenic transformation of carcinogens. Jpn J Vet Res 52, 185192.Google Scholar
26 ITO EN (2012) Major components and health benefits of green tea. http://www.itoen.co.jp/eng/allabout_greentea/components_benefit/index.html (accessed August 2012).Google Scholar
27Monagas, M, Urpi-Sarda, M, Sánchez-Patán, F, et al. (2010) Insights into the metabolism and microbial transformation of dietary flavon-3-ols and the bioactivity of their metabolites. Food Funct 1, 233253.Google Scholar
28Del Rio, D, Borges, G & Crozier, A (2010) Berry flavonoids and phenolics: bioavailability and evidence of protective effects. Br J Nutr 104, Suppl. 3, S67S90.Google Scholar
29Williamson, G & Clifford, MN (2010) Colonic metabolites of berry polyphenols: the missing link to biological activity? Br J Nutr 104, Suppl. 3, S48S66.Google Scholar
30Benzie, IFF & Wachtel-Galor, S (2010) Vegetarian diets and public health: biomarker and redox connections. Antiox Redox Signal 13, 15751591.Google Scholar
31Hou, Z, Lambert, JD, Chin, K, et al. (2004) Effects of tea polyphenols on signal transduction pathways related to cancer chemoprevention. Mutat Res 555, 319.Google Scholar
32Fraga, CS & Oteiza, PI (2011) Dietary flavonoids: role of (-)-epicatechin and related procyanidins in cell signaling. Free Radic Biol Med 51, 813823.Google Scholar
33Chu, KO, Wang, CC, Chu, CY, et al. (2007) Uptake and distribution of catechins in fetal organs following in utero exposure in rats. Hum Reprod 22, 280287.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
34Lambert, JD, Lee, MJ, Diamond, L, et al. (2006) Dose-dependent levels of epigallocatechin-3-gallate in human colon cancer cells and mouse plasma and tissues. Drug Metab Dispos 34, 811.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
35Wang, P, Aronson, WJ, Huang, M, et al. (2010) Green tea polyphenols and metabolites in prostatectomy tissue: implications for cancer prevention. Cancer Prev Res 3, 985993.Google Scholar
36Sang, S, Lee, MJ, Yang, I, et al. (2008) Human urinary metabolite profile of tea polyphenols analyzed by liquid chromatography/electrospray ionization tandem mass spectrometry with data-dependent acquisition. Rapid Comm Mass Spectrom 22, 15671578.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
37Chow, HH, Hakin, IA, Vining, DR, et al. (2005) Effects of dosing condition on the oral bioavailability of green tea catechins after single-dose administration of Polyphenon E in healthy individuals. Clin Cancer Res 11, 46274633.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Typical catechin overlay chromatogram showing elution patterns of epigallocatechin (9·4 min), catechin (11·2 min), epicatechin (13·6 min), epigallocatechin gallate (14·4 min), epicatechin gallate (21·0 min) and the internal standard (21·6 min). For details of m/z, see Table 1. Eluates were diverted to waste for the first 8 min.

Figure 1

Table 1 Standard precursor ions (Q1) and product ions (Q3) for catechins*

Figure 2

Table 2 Catechin content of a typical 1·5 % (w/v) infusion of the tea (Longjin ‘pre-rain’ green tea; Camellia sinensis) used in the acute study, with the calculated catechin content of the doses used for the acute intake and daily supplement

Figure 3

Table 3 Plasma catechins (nmol/l) after a single dose of 200 ml of 1 % (w/v) green tea and following 7 d of regular intake of 2×150 ml of 1 % (w/v) green tea (Camellia sinensis) (Mean values and standard deviations, medians and ranges; n 16)

Figure 4

Table 4 Urine total catechins (nmol/mmol creatinine) after a single dose and after 7 d of twice-daily intake of green tea (Camellia sinensis) (Mean values and standard deviations, medians and ranges; n 16)