Acute and Subacute Safety Evaluation of Black Tea Extract (Herbt Tea Essences) in Mice

Toxics. 2022 May 27;10(6):286. doi: 10.3390/toxics10060286.

Abstract

Theabrownin (TB) is a heterogeneous biomacromolecule, extracted from tea, with many functional groups. Importantly, TB possesses diverse health benefits, such as antitumor activity and blood lipid-lowering effects. Presently, the content of TB in tea extract is relatively low. Here, we obtained a deep-processed black tea extract with a high content of TB (close to 80%), which was named Herbt Tea Essences (HTE). Currently, this study was designed to evaluate the biosafety of high-content TB products on mice. We implemented acute and subacute toxic experiments to assess its safety on organs, the serum biochemical and molecular levels. In the acute exposure study, we found that the median lethal dose (LD50) value of HTE was 21.68 g/kg (21.06-24.70 g/kg, greater than 5 g/kg), suggesting that HTE had a low acute toxicity. In the 28-day subacute exposure study, our results showed that no abnormal effects were observed in the 40 and 400 mg/kg/day HTE-treated groups. However, we observed slight nephrotoxicity in the 4000 mg/kg/day HTE-treated group. The HTE-induced nephrotoxic effect might involve the inflammatory response activation mediated by the nuclear transcription factor kappa-B (NF-κB) signaling pathway. This study would provide valuable data for the TB safety assessment and promote this natural biomacromolecule application in daily drinking.

Keywords: safety assessment; tea extract; theabrownin.

Grants and funding

The Natural Science Foundation of Fujian Province, China (2021Y4006); the medicine and health instructive project of Xiamen city (3502Z20199012) and School of Life Sciences, Xiamen University-Xiamen HERBT Biotechnology Company Limited (No. XDHT2020016C).