| Literature DB >> 26287216 |
Maria Filomena de Jesus Raposo1, Alcina Maria Miranda Bernardo de Morais2, Rui Manuel Santos Costa de Morais3.
Abstract
Epidemiological studies have shown a relation between antioxidants and the prevention of several chronic diseases. Microalgae are a potential novel source of bioactive molecules, including a wide range of different carotenoids that can be used as nutraceuticals, food supplements and novel food products. The objective of this review is (i) to update the research that has been carried out on the most known carotenoids produced by marine microalgae, including reporting on their high potentialities to produce other less known important compounds; (ii) to compile the work that has been done in order to establish some relationship between carotenoids and oxidative protection and treatment; (iii) to summarize the association of oxidative stress and the various reactive species including free radicals with several human diseases; and (iv) to provide evidence of the potential of carotenoids from marine microalgae to be used as therapeutics to treat or prevent these oxidative stress-related diseases.Entities:
Keywords: RNS; ROS; aging; astaxanthin; carotenoids; chronic diseases; free radicals; fucoxanthin; inflammatory diseases; marine microalga; oxidative stress; β-carotene
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26287216 PMCID: PMC4557017 DOI: 10.3390/md13085128
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Main carotenoids from marine microalgae.
| Main Carotenoid | Chemical IUPAC Name/Chemical Structure | Concentration | Microalga | Other Carotenoids | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| β-carotene | β,β-carotene | 10%–13% DW |
| zeaxanthin, lutein, α-carotene | occur mostly as a mixture of 9- | [ |
| 50% TC (TC = 0.9% DW) |
| canthaxanthin (25% TC or 97% DW), astaxanthin (0.7% DW) | ||||
| 80% TC |
| astaxanthin, lutein | ||||
| astaxanthin(as 3 | 3,3′-dihydroxy-β,β-carotene-4,4′-dione | up to 7% DW; 75% TC |
| β-carotene, lutein, canthaxanthin, neoxanthin, violaxanthin, zeaxanthin, echinenone | occur as a racemic mixture of mainly mono- and diesters ( | [ |
| lutein | β,ε-carotene-3,3′-diol | 0.2%–0.4% DW |
| violaxanthin, loroxanthin, α- and β-carotene | [ | |
| canthaxanthin | β,β-carotene-4,4′-dione | 4.75% DW | astaxanthin 0.15% DW, | [ | ||
| canthaxanthin | β,β-carotene-4,4′-dione | 45% TC |
| astaxanthin 12.5% TCviolaxanthin | [ | |
| fucoxanthin | acetic acid [(1 | 1.65%DW |
| diadinoxanthin, eaxanthin, neoxanthin, violaxanthin, β-carotene | occur mainly as all- | [ |
| 1.8% DW | [ | |||||
| 0.52% DW |
| [ | ||||
| up to 2.2% DW |
| diadinoxanthin, β-carotene | [ | |||
| zeaxanthin | β,β-carotene-4,4′-diol | 97.4% TC |
| β-carotene | [ | |
| echinenone (extracelular) | β,β-carotene-4-one | 0.17% DW |
| botryoxanthins A and B—0.03% DW | extracellular pigments are produced and secreted into the intercellular matrix | [ |
| Lutein (intracelular) | β,ε-carotene-3,3′-diol | up to 0.16% DW | neox/loroxanthin 0.042% DW | |||
| violaxanthin | (1 |
| antheraxanthin, zeaxanthin | [ | ||
TC = total carotenoids.
Figure 1Pathways for the carotenogenesis and biosynthesis of astaxanthin, based on Han et al. [27], Dambek et al. [48] and Takaichi [29], and the synthesis of fucoxanthin and diadinoxanthin in diatoms [61], including P. tricornutum, proposed by Dambek and colleagues [48]. The genes and enzymes involved in the process and already identified in some microalgae are evidenced; the underlined ones were reported by Bertrand [61].
Figure 2Cascade triggered within a cell by O2•− (superoxide radical) generated mainly by NADPH oxidase. Some reactions with lipid hydroperoxides (LOOH) are also included (dashed arrows; M = transition metal) [58,63,64,65].
Reactive species causing oxidative stress.
| Groups of Reactive Species | Examples |
|---|---|
| ROS | O2•−, H2O2, HO•, 1O2, O3 |
| RNS | NO•, ONOO•, NO2− |
| Lipid hydroperoxides | LO•, LOO• |
| RCS | HOCl, HOBr |
| Glycoxidative species | AGE, ALE |
| Others: | Carbonyl radicals, RSS, GS• |
RCS = reactive chlorous/bromous species; RSS = reactive sulfur species; GS• = glutathione thiyl radical.
Main biomarkers of oxidative stress.
| Biomarkers | Remarks | References |
|---|---|---|
| MDA | reactive aldehyde; lipid peroxidation of ω-3 and ω-6 FA | [ |
| 4-HNE | reactive aldehyde; lipid peroxidation of ω-3 and ω-6 FA | [ |
| acrolein | reactive carbonyl | [ |
| LOOH | lipid hydroperoxides | [ |
| Glycoxidation products: | carbonyl-derived from protein changes | [ |
| pentosidine (AGE) | marker for diabetes-associated complications | |
| (CML); marker for diabetes-associated complications | ||
| (CMhL) (AGE) | ||
| fructoselysine | marker for diabetes | |
| fructosehydroxylysine | ||
| ketoimine and ketoamine adducts | to protein | |
| ALE | advanced lipoxidation end products | |
| Dopaminergic markers: | [ | |
| Cell apoptosis markers (hallmarkers): | [ | |
| PARP breaking | poly ADP ribose polymerase | |
| Markers for PD’s substantia nigra: | [ | |
| Markers for oxidative stress in tissues: | [ | |
| GSH | Glutathione | |
| isoprostanes (e.g., IPF2α-I) | useful for atherosclerosis plaques; markers for lipid peroxidation | |
| LOOH & thiobarbituric acid reactive species (TBARS) | ||
| enediol radical anion | marker for diabetic patients; results from autoxidation of glucose |
* useful for DNA lesions and human cancers.
Antioxidant activity of main carotenoids from microalgae against reactive species.
| Carotenoid | AO activity | Reactive Species | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| astaxanthin | 1O2 quencher, | 1O2, | [ |
| radical scavenging, | O2•−, H2O2, HO•, | ||
| ROS and RNS quencher, | NO, LOOH, ONOO−, HOCl | ||
| chain-breaking AO, lipid peroxidation inhibitor, inhibits hallmarkers | |||
| β-carotene | 1O2 quencher; | 1O2, | [ |
| radical scavenger; | NO2, ONOOH and ONOO− | ||
| inhibits Na+K+-ATPase, stimulates catalase and GS transferase | |||
| canthaxanthin | ROS and RNS quencher; chain-breaking AO | 1O2 | [ |
| fucoxanthin | 1O2 quencher, | 1O2, | [ |
| radical scavenger; | O2•−, HO•,ONOO−, HOCl, | ||
| inhibits Na+K+-ATPase, stimulates catalase and glutathione transferase | DPPH•, 12-DS•, NB•-L, AAPH, ABTS, ABAP, AIBN |