| Literature DB >> 29843396 |
Carolina Soares Moura1, Pablo Christiano Barboza Lollo2, Priscila Neder Morato3, Jaime Amaya-Farfan4.
Abstract
Interest in the heat shock proteins (HSPs), as a natural physiological toolkit of living organisms, has ranged from their chaperone function in nascent proteins to the remedial role following cell stress. As part of the defence system, HSPs guarantee cell tolerance against a variety of stressors, including exercise, oxidative stress, hyper and hypothermia, hyper and hypoxia and improper diets. For the past couple of decades, research on functional foods has revealed a number of substances likely to trigger cell protection through mechanisms that involve the induction of HSP expression. This review will summarize the occurrence of the most easily inducible HSPs and describe the effects of dietary proteins, peptides, amino acids, probiotics, high-fat diets and other food-derived substances reported to induce HSP response in animals and humans studies. Future research may clarify the mechanisms and explore the usefulness of this natural alternative of defense and the modulating mechanism of each substance.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive peptide; obesity; whey protein
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29843396 PMCID: PMC6024325 DOI: 10.3390/nu10060683
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Schematic representation of the role of the classical heat shock-response inducers, now adding nutrients and bioactives. The two kinds of inducers could act individually or in an additive fashion. Explanation: (left side) an ingested nutrient or bioactive could enter directly both the cytoplasm and nucleus as such or be transformed by the microbiota (extracellularly to the host) or by the host’s (intracellularly) own metabolism. On the right-hand side, the classical scheme showing the induction of HSPs that requires the dissociation of the HSP-HSF complex and the participation of HSF in the production of HSP in the nucleus.
Studies involving dietary components in the regulation of HSPs.
| Dietary Nutrients | Effect on HSP | Tissue/Cell | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glutamine | Increase HSP70, HSP25, HSP90 | Lung, intestine, intestinal cell, blood mononuclear cells | [ |
| Increase HSP70, HSP25 | Intestinal epithelial cells | [ | |
| Increase HSP70 | Mammary epithelial cells | [ | |
| Increase HSP70 | Intestine | [ | |
| None change HSP70, HSP90 | Muscle | [ | |
| Increase HSP70, HSP90; none change HSP25 | Muscle | [ | |
| Leu-Val dipeptide | Increase HSP70, HSP90, HSP25 | Muscle | [ |
| lle-Leu dipeptide | Increase HSP70, HSP60, extracellular HSP70 | Muscle/plasma | [ |
| Whey protein hydrolysate | Increase HSP70, HSP90; none change HSP60, HSP25 | Lung and muscle | [ |
| Formula for premature pups | Reduce HSP70 | Intestine | [ |
| Increase HSP27 | Muscle | [ | |
| Psyllium fiber | Increase HSP25; none change HSP70 | Intestine | [ |
| Chicory fiber | Increase HSP27 | Intestine | [ |
| Probiotic formulation | Increase HSP70, HSP25 | Colon | [ |
| Probiotic ( | None change HSP60, HSP90, HSP70 | Muscle | [ |
| Probiotic (Lactobacillus GG) | Increase HSP70, HSP25 | Colon cell | [ |
| Phenolic (Syrah red wine) | Inhibit HSP70, HSP27 | Tumor cells | [ |
| White wine | None change HSP70, HSP27 | Tumor cells | [ |
| Própolis | Increase HSP70 | Testis | [ |
| Curcumin | Increase HSP30, HSP70 | A6 kidney cells | [ |
| Quercetin | Reduce HSP70 | Cerebellum, cortex and hippocampus | [ |
| High-fat diet (lard) | Reduce HSP70 | Muscle | [ |
| Hyperlipidic oil diet | Reduce HSP25 | Muscle | [ |
| Hyperlipidic high trans-fats content diet | None change HSP25, HSP60, HSP90, HSP70 | Muscle | [ |
| High-fat diet | Increase extracellular HSP60 | Plasma | [ |
| Chia oil with high-fat-high-fructose | Increase HSP70, HSP25 | Muscle | [ |
| Copper deficiency | Reduce HSP70, HSP60; none change HSP90 | Myocardial | [ |
| Allicin | Increase HSP70 | Spinal cord | [ |
| Dietary restriction | Increase HSP70 | Alveolar macrophages | [ |
| Caloric restriction | Increase HSP70 | Caenorhabditis elegans | [ |