Green Tea
compound may be a therapy for rheumatoid a
rthritis
Newswise — A new study from the University of
Michigan Health System suggests that a compound
in green tea may provide therapeutic benefits to
people with rheumatoid arthritis.
The study, presented April 29 at the
Experimental Biology 2007 in Washington, D.C.,
looks at a potent anti-inflammatory compound
derived from green tea. Researchers found that
the compound – called epigallocatechin-3-gallate
(EGCG) – inhibited the production of several
molecules in the immune system that contribute
to inflammation and joint damage in people with
rheumatoid arthritis.
The compound from green tea also was found to
suppress the inflammatory products in the
connective tissue of people with rheumatoid
arthritis.
“Our research is a very promising step in the
search for therapies for the joint destruction
experienced by people who have rheumatoid
arthritis,” says Salah-uddin Ahmed, Ph.D., lead
researcher on the study. Ahmed, a research
investigator with the Division of Rheumatology
at the U-M Health System, was selected to
present the research at the Experimental Biology
meeting as the recipient of the Young Scientist
Travel Award, given by the American Society for
Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics. This
study was also selected by the American Society
for Nutrition to be featured in a press release.
To conduct the research, the scientists
isolated cells called synovial fibroblasts
from the joints of patients with rheumatoid
arthritis. These fibroblasts – cells that
form a lining of the tissue surrounding the
capsule of the joints – then were cultured
in a growth medium and incubated with the
green tea compound.
The fibroblasts were then stimulated with
pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1β, a protein of
the immune system known to play an important
role in causing joint destruction in people with
rheumatoid arthritis.
The researchers looked at whether the green tea
compound has the capability to block the
activity of two potent molecules, IL-6 and
cyclooxygenase-2 (COX-2), which also are
actively involved in causing bone erosion in the
joints of people with rheumatoid arthritis.
When untreated cells were stimulated with IL-1β,
a sequence of molecular events occurred that
resulted in production of the bone-destructive
molecules. But the scientists found that
pre-incubation with EGCG was capable of
inhibiting the production of these molecules.
EGCG also inhibited the production of
prostaglandin E2, a hormone-like substance that
causes inflammation in the joints.
The cell signaling pathways that regulate levels
of these immune system molecules under both
normal and rheumatoid arthritis situations are
well studied, and the researchers were able to
trace the effects of the green tea compound
infusion to see that it worked by inhibiting
these pathways.
Ahmed says that these studies suggest that EGCG
or molecules that could be derived synthetically
from the EGCG found in green tea may be of
therapeutic value by inhibiting the joint
destruction in rheumatoid arthritis.
Previously, Ahmed and other researchers made
another promising finding when EGCG-pretreated
synovial fibroblasts were stimulated with the
cytokine IL-1β to study the protective effect of
this green tea compound. Compared to untreated
synovial fibroblasts, the cells treated with
EGCG markedly blocked the ability of IL-1β to
produce the proteins and enzymes that infiltrate
the joints of persons with rheumatoid arthritis
and cause cartilage degradation.
The laboratory now is focused on the inhibitory
role of EGCG in gene expression. The scientists
plan to test EGCG in animal models of rheumatoid
arthritis to see if it provides similar
therapeutic or preventive effects. Ahmed
believes that the outcome of these studies will
form a strong foundation for future testing of
green tea compound in humans with rheumatoid
arthritis.
In addition to Ahmed, authors of the study are
Angela Pakozdi, M.D., a former research fellow
in the Division of Rheumatology at the U-M
Health System; and Alisa E. Koch, M.D., the
Frederick G.L. Huetwell and William D. Robinson,
M.D. Professor of Rheumatology at the U-M Health
System and a researcher at the Veterans Affairs
Ann Arbor Healthcare System.
This research was supported by National
Institutes of Health grants and Veteran
Administration Medical Research Service funds to
Koch.
Meeting: Experimental Biology 2007, American
Society for Nutrition Abstract 1652.