Lemon verbena has been shown to ameliorate obesity-related
oxidative
stress, but the intracellular final effectors underlying its antioxidant
activity are still unknown. The purpose of this study was to correlate
the antioxidant capacity of plasma metabolites of lemon verbena (verbascoside,
isoverbascoside, hydroxytyrosol, caffeic acid, ferulic acid, homoprotocatechuic
acid, and luteolin-7-diglucuronide) with their uptake and intracellular
metabolism in hypertrophic adipocytes under glucotoxic conditions.
To this end, intracellular ROS levels were measured, and the intracellular
metabolites were identified and quantified by high-performance liquid
chromatography with a diode array detector coupled to mass spectrometry
(HPLC-DAD-MS). The results showed that the plasma metabolites of lemon
verbena are absorbed by adipocytes and metabolized through phase II
reactions and that the intracellular appearance of these metabolites
correlates with the decrease in the level of glucotoxicity-induced
oxidative stress. It is postulated that the biotransformation and
accumulation of these metabolites in adipocytes contribute to the
long-term antioxidant activity of the extract.