| Literature DB >> 27834921 |
Vlasios Goulas1, Evgenios Stylos2,3, Maria V Chatziathanasiadou4, Thomas Mavromoustakos5, Andreas G Tzakos6.
Abstract
The contribution of natural products to the drug-discovery pipeline has been remarkable since they have served as a rich source for drug development and discovery. Natural products have adapted, during the course of evolution, optimum chemical scaffolds against a wide variety of diseases, including cancer and diabetes. Advances in high-throughput screening assays, assisted by the continuous development on the instrumentation's capabilities and omics, have resulted in charting a large chemical and biological space of drug-like compounds, originating from natural sources. Herein, we attempt to integrate the information on the chemical composition and the associated biological impact of carob fruit in regards to human health. The beneficial and health-promoting effects of carob along with the clinical trials and the drug formulations derived from carob's natural components are presented in this review.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; carob; diabetes; diarrhea; fiber; hyperlipidemia; locust bean gum; omics; polyphenols; tannins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27834921 PMCID: PMC5133875 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17111875
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Main chemical constituents in carob pulp and seed with nutritional and health-promoting properties.
Figure 2Chemical structures of (a) d-pinitol and (b) locust bean gum (LBG).
A summary of most common phenolic compounds in different parts of carob fruit.
| Polyphenol | Carob Part/Fraction | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 4-hydroxybenzoic acid | Pulp | [ |
| Caffeic acid | Pulp | [ |
| Chlorogenic acid | Seed | [ |
| Cinnamic acid | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Coumaric acid | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Ferulic acid | Fiber, pulp, seed | [ |
| Gallic acid | Pulp, fiber, seed | [ |
| Gentisic acid | Seed | [ |
| Syringic acid | Pulp, seed | [ |
| (epi)gallocatechin | Fiber | [ |
| (epi)gallocatechingallate | Fiber | [ |
| Apigenin | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Catechin | Pulp, seed | [ |
| Chrysoeriol | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Eridictyol | Pulp | [ |
| Genistein | Pulp | [ |
| Isorhamnetin | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Kaempferol | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Kaempferol rhamnoside | Fiber | [ |
| Kaempferol-desoxyhexoside and -dihexoside | Pulp | [ |
| Luteolin | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Myricetin | Seed | [ |
| Myricetin rhamnoside and -desoxyhexoside | Fiber | [ |
| Myricetin-hexoside | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Naringenin | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Quercetin | Fiber, seed | [ |
| Quercetin-arabinoside | Fiber | [ |
| Quercetin-desoxyhexoside and -hexoside | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| Quercetin rhamnoside | Pulp | [ |
| Tricetin 3′, 5′ dimethyl ether | Fiber, pulp | [ |
| (epi)gallocatechin + 4 gallic acid units | Fiber | [ |
| Hexose + 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 Gallic acid Units | Fiber | [ |
| Pentoses + 2 gallic acid units | Fiber | [ |
| prodelphinidin dimer and trimer | Fiber | [ |
The chemical components of carob and their biological evaluation
| Group of Chemical Constituents/Individual Substances | Biological Evaluation of Constituents/Disease | Carob Parts/Fraction | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| LBG/galactomannan | Gastrointestinal effects | Seed endosperm | [ |
| Anti-diabetic activity | Carob pulp | [ | |
| Soluble and Insoluble Dietary Fiber Polyphenols/Gallic acid, Gallotannins, Flavonol Glycosides | Glycemic control, Enhanced lipid metabolism, Lowers total and LDL cholesterol | Carob Pulp | [ |
| Insoluble Dietary Fiber Polyphenols/Tannins, Cellulose, Semicellulose, Lignin, Pectin | Cholesterol metabolism, Enhances lipid oxidation, Lowers postprandial acylated ghrelin | Carob Fiber | [ |
| Polyphenols/ Gallic acid, Catechin, Myricetin rhamnoside, Eriodictyol glucoside, Quercetin glucoside, Quercetin rhamnoside | Anticancer effects | Carob Fiber | [ |
| Polyphenols—Alkaloids/(+)-Catechin; Gentisic acid; Chlorogenic acid; Catechol; Ferulic acid; Gallic acid; Myricetin; Methyl gallate; Quercetin; Rutin; Syringic acid; Theophylline; Vanillin | Cytotoxic activities | Germ Flour Extracts (seed) | [ |
| Fiber | Nutritional utilization, Induction of lipodemia | Carob Fiber | [ |
| Fiber | Hyperlipidemia effects | Carob fiber | [ |
| Tannins—Polyphenols | Anti-diarrheal effects | Carob pod | [ |
| Tannins—Pectin | Anti-diarrheal effects | Carob bean juice | [ |
Representative applications of locust bean gum (LBG) as drug carrier in drug formulations.
| Carrier Agent | Role of Carrier Agent | Active Substance | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carboxymethyl derivative of LBG | Controlled release | Glipizide | [ |
| LBG | Controlled release, Floatability | Ziprasidone HCl | [ |
| Modified LBC (heating method) | Increased solubility | Atorvastatin | [ |
| Interpenetrating polymer network microspheres of LBG and poly (vinyl alcohol) | Oral controlled release | Buflomedil HCl | [ |
| LBG and chitosan mixtures | Mucoadhesive component in tablets | Propranolol HCl | [ |
| Ca2+ alginate–LBG microspheres | Prolonged release | Aceclofenac | [ |
| LBG gel-embedded niosomes | Preparation of vesicular systems | Monoammonium glycyrrhizinate | [ |