Monograph #050

Grape

Vitis vinifera · Common Grape Vine · European Grape · Wine Grape
★★★★☆ Evidence SIRT1 / NAD+ Longevity Axis NF-κB / Inflammatory Cytokine Axis Seed

Grape compounds (OPCs, resveratrol) have among the most extensive research databases in botanical medicine. This section uses the hybrid Clinical Observations + Biomarker Targets format.

01 Identity 02 Compounds 03 Pathways 04 Biomarkers 05 Extraction 07 Dosing 08 Synergies 09 Safety 11 Evidence 12 Protocol

Botanical Profile

Vitis vinifera L. — Seed (grape seed extract); Leaf (red/white wine grape leaves); Skin/Berry (whole fruit, raisins, juice); Root bark (traditional). Native to the Mediterranean region, central Europe, and southwestern Asia; cultivated worldwide in temperate and warm-temperate zones for millennia

Berry/fruit: sweet-tart, variable by variety; high sugar content in ripe fruit. Grape seed: intensely astringent, bitter, dry (high tannin and OPC content). Grape leaf: mildly astringent, slightly tart, herbaceous; used in culinary traditions worldwide (dolmas). Grape seed extract powder: dark tan to brown; very astringent taste. Wine: complex flavor matrix of sugar fermentation byproducts, tannins, and fruit esters.

Species Integrity

Vitis vinifera is the primary medicinal and culinary grape species. Muscadine grape (Vitis rotundifolia) is native to the southeastern US and thrives in Zone 9a SE Texas; it contains higher ellagic acid and different resveratrol profiles than V. vinifera. Concord grape (Vitis labrusca) is common in North American commerce. All three are medicinal and can be used interchangeably for most applications.

Active Compound Profile

Oligomeric Proanthocyanidins (OPCs / procyanidins)
Grape seed: 95%+ in standardized extracts; skin: 0.5–1% fresh weight
Potent antioxidants (50x vitamin E, 20x vitamin C in free-radical scavenging assays); NF-κB inhibition; collagen cross-linking support; endothelial protection; inhibit LDL oxidation; anti-inflammatory via COX and LOX inhibition
Resveratrol (trans-resveratrol)
Skin: 0.1–0.3mg/g fresh skin; seeds: trace; highest in dark-skinned varieties
SIRT1 activator (NAD+-dependent deacetylase); AMPK activator; NF-κB inhibitor; estrogen receptor modulator (ERα/ERβ selective); activates autophagy; anti-cancer multiple mechanisms; anti-inflammatory
Anthocyanins (delphinidin, cyanidin, malvidin glycosides)
Dark skin: 0.1–0.5% fresh weight; essentially absent in green/white varieties
Antioxidant; anti-inflammatory; endothelial protective; improve capillary integrity; mild antimicrobial; inhibit platelet aggregation
Quercetin and kaempferol glycosides
Skin and leaf: 0.1–0.5% dry weight
Antioxidant; anti-inflammatory; mast cell stabilization; anti-histamine; 5-LOX inhibitor; mild thyroid-peroxidase inhibitory activity at high concentrations (relevant to Hashimoto's consideration)
Tartaric acid, malic acid
Berry: 0.5–1.5% tartaric acid
Acidic pH; mild astringent; supports urinary tract health; chelates dietary minerals
Absorption

Fat co-administration for resveratrol: Lipid vehicle slows gastric emptying and reduces first-pass hepatic sulfation of resveratrol; olive oil or similar fat with grape products increases resveratrol bioavailability

Mechanism of Action

★★★☆☆ SIRT1 / NAD+ Longevity Axis Trans-resveratrol activates SIRT1, the NAD+-dependent deacetylase associated with caloric restriction mimicry, mitochondrial biogenesis (PGC-1α), and epigenetic regulation of inflammatory and metabolic genes
★★★☆☆ NF-κB / Inflammatory Cytokine Axis OPCs and resveratrol independently and synergistically inhibit IKK-β and NF-κB nuclear translocation; reduce TNF-α, IL-6, IL-1β, and COX-2 expression
★★★☆☆ Endothelial Protection / Vascular Health OPCs stabilize collagen cross-linking in capillary walls; inhibit hyaluronidase and elastase; increase NO production; reduce LDL oxidation and foam cell formation
★★★☆☆ AMPK / Metabolic Sensing Resveratrol activates AMPK (partly via SIRT1-LKB1 pathway), improving insulin sensitivity and fatty acid oxidation in muscle and adipose tissue
★★★☆☆ Estrogen Receptor Modulation Resveratrol is a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM): ERβ agonist, ERα weak partial agonist/antagonist; modulates estrogen-driven gene expression without estrogenic tissue proliferation side effects

What It Moves in Your Labs

BiomarkerDirectionTargetMechanism
Oxidized LDL (ox-LDL) ↓ Decrease <60 U/L OPCs are potent inhibitors of LDL oxidation; provide electron donation to neutralize lipid peroxidation chain reactions
hs-CRP ↓ Decrease <1.0 mg/L NF-κB inhibition by OPCs and resveratrol reduces IL-6 and TNF-α; direct inflammatory marker reduction
Fasting Glucose ↓ Decrease <100 mg/dL AMPK activation by resveratrol improves hepatic insulin sensitivity; OPCs reduce post-prandial glucose spike
TPO Antibodies ↓ Decrease <35 IU/mL NF-κB suppression reduces autoimmune inflammatory drive; antioxidant protection of thyroid gland from TPO-generated ROS
Triglycerides ↓ Decrease <100 mg/dL SIRT1/AMPK activation promotes fatty acid oxidation; OPCs improve lipid metabolism

Extraction & Preparation

Fresh whole grape (dark-skinned): 100% OPCs (skin) + anthocyanins + resveratrol; fiber intact

Solubility · Water-soluble; also extracted by ethanolMenstruum · 60% ethanolPlant material · Dried grape skins + grape seed (from dark-skinned V. vinifera or muscadine)Maceration time · 4–6 weeks (agitate daily)Ratio · 1:5 (dried)

Dosing Framework

Grape seed extract: take with meals to reduce astringency-related GI discomfort and optimize absorption with food-based lipids.

Dose 1
Grape seed extract: 150–300mg standardized extract, 1–2x daily
Most clinically studied dose range; take with meals to reduce GI astringency
Dose 3
Resveratrol supplement: 500–2000mg/day (bioavailable form)
High dose required due to poor bioavailability; liposomal form preferred; grape food sources alone provide insufficient resveratrol for SIRT1 activation

Synergy Partners

★★★☆☆ Resveratrol (if supplementing separately) OPCs and resveratrol act synergistically on NF-κB and SIRT1 pathways; combined grape seed extract + resveratrol provides broader phytochemical coverage than either alone
★★★☆☆ Vitamin C OPCs and vitamin C regenerate each other after antioxidant reactions; ascorbate recycles oxidized OPC radicals back to active antioxidant form
★★★☆☆ Pine Bark Extract (Pycnogenol) Chemically similar OPC profile to grape seed; procyanidin B2 predominates in Pycnogenol vs. B1 in grape seed; combined provides broader procyanidin spectrum and may have additive endothelial effects
★★★☆☆ Quercetin Quercetin (mast cell stabilizer, 5-LOX inhibitor) and OPCs (NF-κB inhibitor, endothelial protector) provide complementary anti-inflammatory coverage; both present in whole grape but supplemental quercetin adds synergy
Signature Stack

THE VASCULAR ANTIOXIDANT TRIAD
Components: Grape Seed Extract (OPCs) + Rosehips (vitamin C + anthocyanins) + Pine Bark Extract (procyanidins) · Multi-pathway convergence: OPC antioxidant protection (grape seed + pine bark) + ascorbate regeneration cycle (rosehips vitamin C) + anthocyanin capillary strengthening (rosehips + grape) + NF-κB inhibition (all three) + endothelial NO support (OPCs) · This stack addresses the elevated cardiovascular risk, endothelial dysfunction, and oxidative stress burden characteristic of Hashimoto's hypothyroidism. It provides overlapping but distinct proanthocyanidin profiles from two sources, supported by vitamin C as both independent antioxidant and OPC recycler. · Practical integration: Morning GSE capsule + rosehips tea + optional Pycnogenol; or whole-food approach with daily dark grapes, rosehips tea, and home-grown muscadine harvest.

Contraindications & Interactions

Minor Anticoagulant / antiplatelet interaction OPCs and resveratrol have mild antiplatelet and anticoagulant activity. Grape seed extract may potentiate warfarin, aspirin, and clopidogrel effects at high supplemental doses.
Avoid Pregnancy Culinary grape consumption is safe during pregnancy. High-dose resveratrol supplements lack safety data; resveratrol's SERM activity is a theoretical concern. GSE at standard doses likely safe but limited data.
Minor Estrogenic activity (resveratrol) Resveratrol is a phytoestrogen (SERM); ERβ agonist. May interact with hormone-sensitive conditions or tamoxifen therapy.
Minor GI astringency at high OPC doses High doses of grape seed extract (>300mg/day) may cause GI discomfort, nausea, and constipation due to tannin astringency.

Evidence Base

★★★★☆ Cardiovascular Protection / Endothelial Function Strong — Multiple RCTs with consistent endpoints; systematic reviews
★★★★☆ Antioxidant Capacity Strong — Multiple biomarker-validated studies
★★★☆☆ Insulin Sensitivity / Metabolic (Resveratrol) Moderate — Promising RCTs; bioavailability limitation complicates translation
★★★☆☆ Venous Insufficiency (Grape Leaf) Moderate — European Commission E approved; RCT evidence
★★☆☆☆ Anti-Cancer (Mechanistic) Preliminary — Strong in vitro/animal data; insufficient human RCT evidence

Evidence Gaps

The highest-value research gap for Meridian Medica: no published RCT has directly evaluated grape seed extract or muscadine-derived OPCs in Hashimoto's thyroiditis for TPO antibody reduction or thyroid autoimmune modulation. Given OPCs' NF-κB inhibition and antioxidant protection of thyroid tissue from TPO-generated ROS, a targeted 6-month RCT measuring TPO antibodies, oxidized LDL, and hs-CRP in Hashimoto's women would be highly relevant. Muscadine's unique ellagic acid profile adds additional differentiation from standard V. vinifera research.

Quality Alert

Grape seed extract has documented adulteration concerns:

Protocol Integration

Layer 1: Hypothalamic / Autonomic — HPA axis, circadian rhythm, stress response

Layer 2: Systemic Nutritional Repletion — Micronutrient optimization, antioxidant defense

Layer 3: Gut Permeability / Microbiome — Tight junction repair, motility, SIBO management

Recipe Integration
Daily whole-food grape consumption (fresh muscadine, seasonal)
1–2 cups fresh muscadine grapes daily (August–October, Zone 9a)
Feed the Markers

Grape (primarily grape seed extract and muscadine) appears in the following Meridian Medica protocol contexts: