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Original Articles

Inhibitory Effect of Polyphenol-Enriched Apple Extracts on Mast Cell Degranulation in Vitro Targeting the Binding between IgE and FcεRI

, , , , , , , , & show all
Pages 1974-1977 | Received 16 Feb 2005, Accepted 16 Jun 2005, Published online: 22 May 2014
 

Abstract

Extracts from immature fruit of the apple (Rosaceae, Malus sp.), which contain procyanidins (polymers of catechins) as the major ingredients, are known to inhibit histamine release from mast cells. We analyzed in this study the mechanism for the anti-allergic activity of two polyphenol-enriched apple extracts. These extracts, termed “crude apple polyphenol (CAP)” and “apple condensed tannin (ACT)”, reduced the degranulation of mast cells caused by cross-linking of the high-affinity receptor for IgE (FcεRI) with IgE and the antigen in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, western blotting revealed that phosphorylation of the intracellular signal-transduction molecules caused by cross-linking of FcεRI was markedly decreased by the addition of CAP or ACT. We then analyzed the effects of CAP and ACT on the binding of the IgE antibody to FcεRI on mast cells, which is the first key step in the allergic reaction mediated by mast cells, and found that this binding was markedly inhibited by both CAP and ACT. These results indicate that the inhibition of binding between FcεRI and IgE by either CAP or ACT was the probable cause of the suppression of mast cell activation. This is the first report demonstrating the molecular mechanism for the anti-allergic effect of procyanidin-enriched extracts from apples.

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