| Literature DB >> 27790141 |
Graziamaria Corbi1, Valeria Conti2, Sergio Davinelli1, Giovanni Scapagnini1, Amelia Filippelli2, Nicola Ferrara3.
Abstract
Although several efforts have been made in the search for genetic and epigenetic patterns linked to diseases, a comprehensive explanation of the mechanisms underlying pathological phenotypic plasticity is still far from being clarified. Oxidative stress and inflammation are two of the major triggers of the epigenetic alterations occurring in chronic pathologies, such as neurodegenerative diseases. In fact, over the last decade, remarkable progress has been made to realize that chronic, low-grade inflammation is one of the major risk factor underlying brain aging. Accumulated data strongly suggest that phytochemicals from fruits, vegetables, herbs, and spices may exert relevant immunomodulatory and/or anti-inflammatory activities in the context of brain aging. Starting by the evidence that a common denominator of aging and chronic degenerative diseases is represented by inflammation, and that several dietary phytochemicals are able to potentially interfere with and regulate the normal function of cells, in particular neuronal components, aim of this review is to summarize recent studies on neuroinflammaging processes and proofs indicating that specific phytochemicals may act as positive modulators of neuroinflammatory events. In addition, critical pathways involved in mediating phytochemicals effects on neuroinflammaging were discussed, exploring the real impact of these compounds in preserving brain health before the onset of symptoms leading to inflammatory neurodegeneration and cognitive decline.Entities:
Keywords: Nfr2; antioxidants; curcumin; resveratrol; sirtuins
Year: 2016 PMID: 27790141 PMCID: PMC5062465 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2016.00364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Phytochemicals effects on Neurooinflammaging. Neuroimmunoinflammaging is characterized by reduced SIRT1 and Nfr2 activity with consequent increased NF-κB activation. The increased NF-κB activation, also trough Tool Like Receptors (TLR), induces in turn raised proinflammatory factors such as TNFa, IL1b, IL6, iNOS. The disequilibrium between anti- (IL10) and pro-inflammatory molecules determines increased inflammation, and a vicious circle is established that sustains neuroinflammaging. The phytochemicals (like curcumin, resveratrol, sulphurane, etc.) inducing increase in Nrf2 and SIRT1 activity could be able to inhibit the NF-κB activation and then to break the vicious circle ending the progression of the brain aging.
Summary of phytochemicals with their food origin, effects in brain, studies demostrating this effects, the models used and their capability to cross the Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB).
| Ferulic acid | Tomatoes | Ou et al., | Ferulic acid was transported across a model Blood-Brain Barrier (BBB). After administration of Shunaoxin pills, ferulic acid was rapidly absorbed and distributed in brain. | ||
| Sweet corn, rice, | Primary mesangial cell cultures | Tetsuka et al., | |||
| Wheat oats, barley grain, | Inhibits microglial activation | Imprinting Control Region (ICR) strain mice | Kim et al., | ||
| Chinese water chestnut, pineapple | Protects against changes in the conformation of synaptosomal membrane proteins | Cultured neuronal cells | Kanaski et al., | Wu et al., | |
| Seeds of coffee, apple | Protects against Aβ toxicity directly and by inducing protecting genes | Hippocampal cultures | Sultana et al., | ||
| Artichoke, peanut | Rat astrocytes and neurons | Scapagnini et al., | |||
| Orange, navy bean | Ameliorated neuroinflammation in including β-amyloid plaque-associated gliosis and expression of TNF-α and IL-1β and | Mouse model of cerebral amyloidosis mutant human transgenes and | Mori et al., | ||
| Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | Black tea, green tea | Protects dopaminergic neurons from damage induced by 6-hydroxydopamine | Unilateral 6-hydroxydopamine (6-OHDA)-treated rat model of Parkinson's disease | Guo et al., | The level of EGCG found in the major organs was found to be ~1/10 that found in the serum. Most interestingly, this includes the brain, suggesting that EGCG passes through the blood-brain barrier. |
| Oolong teas, carob flour | Transgenic flies and yeast cultures | Ehrnhoefer et al., | |||
| Pecans, filberts, hazelnuts | Protects directly neurons against Aβ toxicity | Mixed (glial/neuronal) hippocampal cultured cells from E19 fetuses obtained from Sprague-Dawley rats | Bastianetto et al., | Smith, | |
| Raw cranberries, pistachios | Protects against Aβ-induced cognitive impairment | 5-week-old male rats | Haque et al., | ||
| Bovine aortic endothelial cells | Wu et al., | ||||
| Protects cultured rat cerebellar granule neurons from oxidative stress | Primary cultures of rat cerebellar granule neurons | Schroeder et al., | |||
| Promotes cleavage of APP into α-CTF and soluble APP-α. | Primary micloglial and neurons cultures from Tg2576 mice | Obregon et al., | |||
| Cleavage of APP into α-CTF and soluble APP-α with elevated α-secretase cleavage activity and activation of ADAM10 | Mouse brains | Rezai-Zadeh et al., | |||
| Pterostilbene | Blueberry, eanuts, almonds | Reverses age-related deficits in neuronal and behavioral parameters | Male Fischer 344 rats | Joseph et al., | It is generally assumed that Pterostilbene can cross the BBB due to its structural similarities to resveratrol. |
| Grapes | Prevents learning and memory deficits | APP/PS1 transgenic mice | Joseph et al., | ||
| Embryonic dopamin neurons transplanted into the unilaterally dopamin-depleted striatum | McGuire et al., | Temsamani et al., | |||
| Improves neuronal signaling, preventing accumulation of proteins tau in the hippocampus of irradiated rats | Rats exposed to 1.5 Gy of 56Fe particles | Poulose et al., | Andres-Lacueva et al., | ||
| Delivers antioxidant and signaling modifying capabilities centrally | 19 months old F344 rats | Andres-Lacueva et al., | |||
| Rats treated with D-galactose | Çoban et al., | ||||
| Improved neurological function, | Male Kunming mice with induced focal cerebral ischemia | Zhou et al., | |||
| Curcumin | Curry, Worcestershire sauce | Protects neurons against ischemic cell death and ameliorated behavioral deficits | Mongolian gerbils | Wang et al., | In transgenic APPswe/PS1dE9 mice demonstrated that curcumin, given intravenously for 7 days, crosses the BBB, binds to β-amyloid deposits in the brain and accelerates their rate of clearance. |
| Food additive (E100) | Cultured hippocampal neurons | Scapagnini et al., | |||
| Reverse chronic stress-induced impairment of hippocampal neurogenesis and | Chronically stressed rats | Xu et al., | |||
| Protective function in T-cell-mediated immunity | Male Sprague–Dawley rats | Kou et al., | Garcia-Alloza et al., | ||
| Primary cultures of cerebellar Granule neurons of rats | González-Reyes et al., | ||||
| Disaggregates Aβ as well as prevents fibril and oligomer formation | Alzheimer transgenic APPSw mouse model | Lim et al., | |||
| Adult male Wistar albino rats, Male Sprague Dawley rats | Al-Omar et al., | ||||
| Sulforaphane | Broccoli, brussels Sprouts | Activate Nrf2-ARE stress response pathway | Male Sprague Dawley rats and nrf2 –/– mice | Zhao et al., | Various studies in animal models suggest the ability of Sulforaphane to cross the BBB and to accumulate in cerebral tissues. |
| Cabbage cauliflower | Protects cultured neurons against oxidative stress | ARE–human placental alkaline phosphatase transgenic mice | Kraft et al., | ||
| Kale, collard greens, horseradish | Protects dopaminergic neurons against mitochondrial toxins | CATH.a cells | Han et al., | Jazwa et al., | |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats | Dash et al., | Clarke et al., | |||
| Neonatal hypoxia-ischemia in Sprague–Dawley rat pups | Ping et al., | ||||
| Resveratrol | Red Grapes, Peanut Butter, Dark Chocolate, Itadori Tea | Attenuated beta-amyloid-induced cytotoxicity, apoptotic features, and intracellular ROS accumulation. Beta-amyloid transiently induced activation of NF-κB was suppressed | PC12 cells | Jang and Surh, | Acute administration of resveratrol by oral gavage using a low dose of 80 μg/kg results in significant accumulation in brain within 4 h. Short term treatment using a concentration of 40 μg/kg by the same route of administration for a period of 15 days also increases resveratrol content in the brain. |
| Blueberries | Neuroprotection against dopaminergic neurons | Organotypic midbrain slice cultures | Okawara et al., | ||
| Protects cortical neurons from oxidative stress-induced injury | Cultures of cortical neuronal cells isolated from embryos of timed pregnant mice | Zhuang et al., | |||
| Suppress alcohol-induced cognitive deficits and neuronal apoptosis | Adult male Wistar rats | Tiwari and Chopra, | |||
| The mouse microglial cell line BV-2 | Capiralla et al., | Bertelli et al., | |||
| Resveratrol mimicked oxidizing conditions in neural progenitor cells | Mouse neural progenitor cells | Prozorovski et al., | Resveratrol being a lipophilic compound can readily cross the BBB via transmembrane diffusion (Lin et al., | ||
| Protects | HdhQ111 knock-in mouse model of Huntington disease | Dali-Youcef et al., | Resveratrol, with its molecular weight of 228 Da (Amri et al., | ||
| Inhibits hypoxia-induced degradation of I kappa B-alpha and phosphorylation of p65 NF-κB protein. These effects were mediated by suppressing the activation of NF-κB, extracellular-signal-regulated kinases (ERK) and JNK/MAPK signaling pathways | Zhang et al., |