
Quercetin is a plant
flavonol from the
flavonoid
Flavonoids (or bioflavonoids; from the Latin word ''flavus'', meaning yellow, their color in nature) are a class of polyphenolic secondary metabolites found in plants, and thus commonly consumed in the diets of humans.
Chemically, flavonoids ...
group of
polyphenols. It is found in many fruits, vegetables, leaves, seeds, and grains; capers, red onions, and
kale
Kale (), or leaf cabbage, belongs to a group of cabbage (''Brassica oleracea'') cultivars grown for their edible leaves, although some are used as ornamentals. Kale plants have green or purple leaves, and the central leaves do not form a head ...
are common foods containing appreciable amounts of it.
[ It has a ]bitter flavor
The gustatory system or sense of taste is the sensory system that is partially responsible for the perception of taste (flavor). Taste is the perception produced or stimulated when a substance in the mouth reacts chemically with taste receptor ...
and is used as an ingredient in dietary supplement
A dietary supplement is a manufactured product intended to supplement one's diet by taking a pill, capsule, tablet, powder, or liquid. A supplement can provide nutrients either extracted from food sources or that are synthetic in order ...
s, beverages, and foods.
Occurrence
Quercetin is a flavonoid
Flavonoids (or bioflavonoids; from the Latin word ''flavus'', meaning yellow, their color in nature) are a class of polyphenolic secondary metabolites found in plants, and thus commonly consumed in the diets of humans.
Chemically, flavonoids ...
widely distributed in nature.[ The name has been used since 1857, and is derived from ''quercetum'' (oak forest), after the oak genus '' Quercus''. It is a naturally occurring polar auxin transport inhibitor.]
Quercetin is one of the most abundant dietary flavonoids, with an average daily consumption of 25–50 milligrams.
In red onions, higher concentrations of quercetin occur in the outermost rings and in the part closest to the root, the latter being the part of the plant with the highest concentration. One study found that organically grown tomatoes had 79% more quercetin than non-organically grown fruit. Quercetin is present in various kinds of honey
Honey is a sweet and viscous substance made by several bees, the best-known of which are honey bees. Honey is made and stored to nourish bee colonies. Bees produce honey by gathering and then refining the sugary secretions of plants (primar ...
from different plant sources.
Biosynthesis
In plants, phenylalanine
Phenylalanine (symbol Phe or F) is an essential α-amino acid with the formula . It can be viewed as a benzyl group substituted for the methyl group of alanine, or a phenyl group in place of a terminal hydrogen of alanine. This essential amino a ...
is converted to 4-coumaroyl-CoA
Coumaroyl-coenzyme A is the thioester of coenzyme-A and coumaric acid. Coumaroyl-coenzyme A is a central intermediate in the biosynthesis of myriad natural products found in plants. These products include Monolignol, lignols (precursors to lignin ...
in a series of steps known as the general phenylpropanoid
The phenylpropanoids are a diverse family of organic compounds that are synthesized by plants from the amino acids phenylalanine and tyrosine. Their name is derived from the six-carbon, aromatic phenyl group and the three-carbon propene tail of ...
pathway using phenylalanine ammonia-lyase, cinnamate-4-hydroxylase
In enzymology, a trans-cinnamate 4-monooxygenase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction
:trans-cinnamate + NADPH + H+ + O2 \rightleftharpoons 4-hydroxycinnamate + NADP+ + H2O
The 4 substrates of this enzyme are trans-cinnamate, ...
, and 4-coumaroyl-CoA-ligase. One molecule of 4-coumaroyl-CoA is added to three molecules of malonyl-CoA
Malonyl-CoA is a coenzyme A derivative of malonic acid.
Functions
It plays a key role in chain elongation in fatty acid biosynthesis and polyketide biosynthesis.
Fatty acid biosynthesis
Malonyl-CoA provides 2-carbon units to fatty acids and commi ...
to form tetrahydroxychalcone using 7,2′-dihydroxy-4′-methoxyisoflavanol synthase. Tetrahydroxychalcone is then converted into naringenin using chalcone isomerase.
Naringenin is converted into eriodictyol
Eriodictyol is a bitter-masking flavanone, a flavonoid extracted from yerba santa (''Eriodictyon californicum''), a plant native to North America. Eriodictyol is one of the four flavanones identified in this plant as having taste-modifying proper ...
using flavanoid 3′-hydroxylase. Eriodictyol is then converted into dihydroquercetin with flavanone 3-hydroxylase, which is then converted into quercetin using flavonol synthase.
Glycosides
Quercetin is the aglycone form of a number of other flavonoid glycosides, such as rutin (also known as quercetin-3-O-rutinoside) and quercitrin, found in citrus fruit, buckwheat and onions.[ Quercetin forms the glycosides quercitrin and rutin together with ]rhamnose
Rhamnose (Rha, Rham) is a naturally occurring deoxy sugar. It can be classified as either a methyl-pentose or a 6-deoxy-hexose. Rhamnose predominantly occurs in nature in its L-form as L-rhamnose (6-deoxy-L-mannose). This is unusual, since most o ...
and rutinose, respectively. Likewise guaijaverin
Guaijaverin is the 3-O-arabinoside of quercetin. It is found in the leaves of ''Psidium guajava
''Psidium guajava'', the common guava, yellow guava, lemon guava, or apple guava is an evergreen shrub or small tree native to the Caribbean, Ce ...
is the 3-''O''-arabinoside
Arabinose is an aldopentose – a monosaccharide containing five carbon atoms, and including an aldehyde (CHO) functional group.
For biosynthetic reasons, most saccharides are almost always more abundant in nature as the "D"-form, or structurally ...
, hyperoside is the 3-''O''- galactoside, isoquercitin is the 3-''O''-glucoside
A glucoside is a glycoside that is derived from glucose. Glucosides are common in plants, but rare in animals. Glucose is produced when a glucoside is hydrolysed by purely chemical means, or decomposed by fermentation or enzymes.
The name was o ...
and spiraeoside
Spiraeoside is a chemical compound. It can be isolated from flowers of ''Filipendula ulmaria'' (L.) (a.k.a. ''Spiraea ulmaria'' or ''meadowsweet'') or from the garden onion (''Allium cepa'').
Spiraeoside is the 4'-O- glucoside of quercetin
Querc ...
is the 4′-''O''-glucoside. CTN-986
CTN-986 is a glycoside of quercetin found in cottonseeds and cottonseed oil. In a rodent model, it displays some antidepressant-like properties and stimulation of neurogenesis in the hippocampus. The neurogenesis appears to be mediated by acti ...
is a quercetin derivative found in cottonseeds and cottonseed oil. Miquelianin is the quercetin 3-''O''-β-D-glucuronopyranoside.
A number of taxifolin (also known as dihydroquercetin) glycosides also exists.
Isoquercetin is the 3-''O''-glucoside of quercetin.
Rutin degradation pathway
The enzyme quercitrinase
In enzymology, a quercitrinase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction
:quercitrin + H2O \rightleftharpoons L-rhamnose + quercetin
Thus, the two substrates of this enzyme are quercitrin and H2O, whereas its two products are L-rhamn ...
can be found in '' Aspergillus flavus''. This enzyme hydrolyzes
Hydrolysis (; ) is any chemical reaction in which a molecule of water breaks one or more chemical bonds. The term is used broadly for substitution, elimination, and solvation reactions in which water is the nucleophile.
Biological hydrolysis ...
the glycoside quercitrin to release quercetin and L-rhamnose
Rhamnose (Rha, Rham) is a naturally occurring deoxy sugar. It can be classified as either a methyl-pentose or a 6-deoxy-hexose. Rhamnose predominantly occurs in nature in its L-form as L-rhamnose (6-deoxy-L-mannose). This is unusual, since most o ...
. It is an enzyme in the rutin catabolic pathway.
Pharmacology
Pharmacokinetics
The bioavailability of quercetin in humans after oral intake is very low, with one study concluding it must be less than 1%. Intravenous injection of quercetin shows a rapid decay in concentration described by a two-compartment model (initial half-life of 8.8 minutes, terminal half-life of 2.4 hours). Because it undergoes rapid and extensive metabolism, the biological effects presumed from ''in vitro'' studies are unlikely to apply ''in vivo''. Quercetin supplements in the aglycone form are less bioavailable than the quercetin glycoside often found in foods, especially red onions. Ingestion with high-fat foods may increase bioavailability compared to ingestion with low-fat foods, and carbohydrate-rich foods may increase absorption of quercetin by stimulating gastrointestinal motility and colonic
Colon cleansing, also known as colon therapy, or colon hydrotherapy, or a colonic, or colonic irrigation encompasses a number of alternative medical therapies claimed to remove unspecified toxins from the colon and intestinal tract by remo ...
fermentation
Fermentation is a metabolic process that produces chemical changes in organic substrates through the action of enzymes. In biochemistry, it is narrowly defined as the extraction of energy from carbohydrates in the absence of oxygen. In food ...
.[
]
Metabolism
Quercetin is rapidly metabolized (via glucuronidation) after the ingestion of quercetin foods or supplements. Five metabolites (quercetin glucuronides) have been found in human plasma after quercetin ingestion. Taken together, the quercetin glucuronides have a half life around 11-12 hours.
In rats, quercetin did not undergo any significant phase I metabolism
Drug metabolism is the metabolic breakdown of drugs by living organisms, usually through specialized enzymatic systems. More generally, xenobiotic metabolism (from the Greek xenos "stranger" and biotic "related to living beings") is the set o ...
. In contrast, quercetin did undergo extensive phase II Phase II, Phase 2 or Phase Two may refer to:
Media
* Marvel Cinematic Universe: Phase Two, six American superhero films from 2013–2015
* ''Star Trek: Phase II'', an unrealized television series based on the characters of Gene Roddenberry's ''S ...
(conjugation) to produce metabolite
In biochemistry, a metabolite is an intermediate or end product of metabolism.
The term is usually used for small molecules. Metabolites have various functions, including fuel, structure, signaling, stimulatory and inhibitory effects on enzymes, c ...
s that are more polar
Polar may refer to:
Geography
Polar may refer to:
* Geographical pole, either of two fixed points on the surface of a rotating body or planet, at 90 degrees from the equator, based on the axis around which a body rotates
* Polar climate, the c ...
than the parent substance and hence are more rapidly excreted from the body. In vitro, the meta-hydroxyl group
In chemistry, a hydroxy or hydroxyl group is a functional group with the chemical formula and composed of one oxygen atom covalently bonded to one hydrogen atom. In organic chemistry, alcohols and carboxylic acids contain one or more hydroxy g ...
of catechol is methylated by catechol-O-methyltransferase. Four of the five hydroxyl groups of quercetin are glucuronidated by UDP-glucuronosyltransferase
Uridine 5'-diphospho-glucuronosyltransferase ( UDP-glucuronosyltransferase, UGT) is a microsomal glycosyltransferase () that catalyzes the transfer of the glucuronic acid component of UDP-glucuronic acid to a small hydrophobic molecule. This is ...
. The exception is the 5-hydroxyl group of the flavonoid ring which generally does not undergo glucuronidation. The major metabolites of orally absorbed quercetin are quercetin-3-glucuronide, 3'-methylquercetin-3-glucuronide, and quercetin-3'-sulfate. A methyl metabolite of quercetin has been shown in vitro to be more effective than quercetin at inhibiting lipopolysaccharide-activated macrophage
Macrophages (abbreviated as M φ, MΦ or MP) ( el, large eaters, from Greek ''μακρός'' (') = large, ''φαγεῖν'' (') = to eat) are a type of white blood cell of the immune system that engulfs and digests pathogens, such as cancer cel ...
s.
Compared to other flavonoid
Flavonoids (or bioflavonoids; from the Latin word ''flavus'', meaning yellow, their color in nature) are a class of polyphenolic secondary metabolites found in plants, and thus commonly consumed in the diets of humans.
Chemically, flavonoids ...
s quercetin is one of the most effective inducers of the phase II detoxification enzymes.
In-vitro studies show that quercetin is a strong inhibitor of the cytochrome P450
Cytochromes P450 (CYPs) are a Protein superfamily, superfamily of enzymes containing heme as a cofactor (biochemistry), cofactor that functions as monooxygenases. In mammals, these proteins oxidize steroids, fatty acids, and xenobiotics, and are ...
enzymes CYP3A4
Cytochrome P450 3A4 (abbreviated CYP3A4) () is an important enzyme in the body, mainly found in the liver and in the intestine. It oxidizes small foreign organic molecules (xenobiotics), such as toxins or drugs, so that they can be removed from t ...
and CYP2C19 and a moderate inhibitor of CYP2D6. Drugs that are metabolized by these pathways may have increased effect. An in-vivo study found that quercetin supplementation slows the metabolism of caffeine to a statistically significant extent in a particular genetic sub-population, but in absolute terms the effect was almost negligible.
Pharmacological research
Quercetin has been reported to inhibit the oxidation of other molecules and hence is classified as an antioxidant
Antioxidants are compounds that inhibit oxidation, a chemical reaction that can produce free radicals. This can lead to polymerization and other chain reactions. They are frequently added to industrial products, such as fuels and lubricant ...
in vitro.[ It contains a polyphenolic chemical substructure that stops oxidation in vitro by acting as a scavenger of free radicals. Quercetin has been shown to inhibit the ]PI3K/AKT pathway
The PI3K/AKT/mTOR pathway is an intracellular signaling pathway important in regulating the cell cycle. Therefore, it is directly related to cellular quiescence, proliferation, cancer, and longevity. PI3K activation phosphorylates and activates A ...
leading to downregulation of the anti- apoptotic protein Bcl-w. Quercetin activates or inhibits the activities of a number of proteins in vitro. For example, it is a nonspecific protein kinase enzyme inhibitor.[
]
Food safety
In 2010, the FDA
The United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA or US FDA) is a federal agency of the Department of Health and Human Services. The FDA is responsible for protecting and promoting public health through the control and supervision of food s ...
acknowledged high-purity quercetin as GRAS for use as an ingredient in various specified food categories at levels up to 500 milligrams per serving.
Health claims
Quercetin has been studied in basic research and small clinical trials
Clinical trials are prospective biomedical or behavioral research studies on human participants designed to answer specific questions about biomedical or behavioral interventions, including new treatments (such as novel vaccines, drugs, dietar ...
. While supplements have been promoted for the treatment of cancer and various other diseases, there is no high-quality evidence that quercetin (via supplements or in food) is useful to treat cancer or any other disease.
The US Food and Drug Administration has issued warning letters to several manufacturers advertising on their product labels and websites that quercetin product(s) can be used to treat diseases. The FDA regards such quercetin advertising and products as unapproved – with unauthorized health claim
A health claim on a food label and in food marketing is a claim by a manufacturer of food products that their food will reduce the risk of developing a disease or condition. For example, it is claimed by the manufacturers of oat cereals that oat ...
s concerning the anti-disease products – as defined by "sections 201(g)(1)(B) and/or 201 (g)(1)(C) of the Act 1 U.S.C. § 321(g)(1)(B) and/or 21 U.S.C. § 321(g)(1)(C)because they are intended for use in the diagnosis, cure, mitigation, treatment, or prevention of disease",[ conditions not met by the manufacturers.
]
Safety
There has been little research into the safety of quercetin supplementation in humans, and the results are insufficient to give confidence that the practice is safe. In particular, there is a lack of safety information on the effect of quercetin supplementation for pregnant women, breastfeeding women, children, and adolescents. The hormonal effects of quercetin found in animal studies raise the suspicion of a parallel effect in humans, particularly in respect of estrogen-dependent tumors.[
Quercetin supplementation can interfere with the effects of medications. The precise nature of this interaction is known for some common medicines, but for many, it is not.]
See also
* List of ineffective cancer treatments
* Flavonol 3-sulfotransferase
In enzymology, a flavonol 3-sulfotransferase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction
:3'-phosphoadenylyl sulfate + flavonol\rightleftharpoons adenosine 3',5'-bisphosphate + flavonol 3-sulfate
Thus, the two substrates of this enzyme ...
* Phenolic compounds in wine
* Phytochemical
Phytochemicals are chemical compounds produced by plants, generally to help them resist fungi, bacteria and plant virus infections, and also consumption by insects and other animals. The name comes . Some phytochemicals have been used as poisons ...
* Quercetin 2,3-dioxygenase
In enzymology, a quercetin 2,3-dioxygenase () is an enzyme that catalysis, catalyzes the chemical reaction
:quercetin + O2 \rightleftharpoons 2-(3,4-dihydroxybenzoyloxy)-4,6-dihydroxybenzoate + CO + H+
Thus, the two substrate (biochemistry), subs ...
* Quercetin 3-O-methyltransferase
In enzymology, a quercetin 3-O-methyltransferase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction
:S-adenosyl-L-methionine + 3,5,7,3',4'-pentahydroxyflavone \rightleftharpoons S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine + 3-methoxy-5,7,3',4'-tetrahydroxyflavone ...
* Quercetin-3-sulfate 3'-sulfotransferase
In enzymology, a quercetin-3-sulfate 3'-sulfotransferase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction
:3'-phosphoadenylyl sulfate + quercetin 3-sulfate \rightleftharpoons adenosine 3',5'-bisphosphate + quercetin 3,3'-bissulfate
Thus, the ...
* Quercetin-3-sulfate 4'-sulfotransferase
In enzymology, a quercetin-3-sulfate 4'-sulfotransferase () is an enzyme that catalysis, catalyzes the chemical reaction
:3'-phosphoadenylyl sulfate + quercetin 3-sulfate \rightleftharpoons adenosine 3',5'-bisphosphate + quercetin 3,4'-bissulfate
...
* Quercetin-3,3'-bissulfate 7-sulfotransferase
In enzymology, a quercetin-3,3'-bissulfate 7-sulfotransferase () is an enzyme that catalyzes the chemical reaction
:3'-phosphoadenylyl sulfate + quercetin 3,3'-bissulfate \rightleftharpoons adenosine 3',5'-bisphosphate + quercetin 3,7,3'-trisulfa ...
References
External links
*
{{Authority control
Aromatase inhibitors
CYP2C8 inhibitors
CYP3A4 inhibitors
Flavonoid antioxidants
GPER agonists
Xanthine oxidase inhibitors
Experimental medical treatments
Phytoestrogens
Selective ERβ agonists