| Literature DB >> 29853868 |
Ammara Riaz1, Azhar Rasul1, Ghulam Hussain2, Muhammad Kashif Zahoor1, Farhat Jabeen1, Zinayyera Subhani3, Tahira Younis1, Muhammad Ali1, Iqra Sarfraz1, Zeliha Selamoglu4.
Abstract
Natural products, an infinite treasure of bioactive chemical entities, persist as an inexhaustible resource for discovery of drugs. This review article intends to emphasize on one of the naturally occurring flavonoids, astragalin (kaempferol 3-glucoside), which is a bioactive constituent of various traditional medicinal plants such as Cuscuta chinensis. This multifaceted compound is well known for its diversified pharmacological applications such as anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, neuroprotective, cardioprotective, antiobesity, antiosteoporotic, anticancer, antiulcer, and antidiabetic properties. It carries out the aforementioned activities by the regulation and modulation of various molecular targets such as transcription factors (NF-κB, TNF-α, and TGF-β1), enzymes (iNOS, COX-2, PGE2, MMP-1, MMP-3, MIP-1α, COX-2, PGE-2, HK2, AChe, SOD, DRP-1, DDH, PLCγ1, and GPX), kinases (JNK, MAPK, Akt, ERK, SAPK, IκBα, PI3K, and PKCβ2), cell adhesion proteins (E-cadherin, vimentin PAR-2, and NCam), apoptotic and antiapoptotic proteins (Beclin-1, Bcl-2, Bax, Bcl-xL, cytochrome c, LC3A/B, caspase-3, caspase-9, procaspase-3, procaspase-8, and IgE), and inflammatory cytokines (SOCS-3, SOCS-5, IL-1β, IL-4, IL-6, IL-8, IL-13, MCP-1, CXCL-1, CXCL-2, and IFN-γ). Although researchers have reported multiple pharmacological applications of astragalin in various diseased conditions, further experimental investigations are still mandatory to fully understand its mechanism of action. It is contemplated that astragalin could be subjected to structural optimization to ameliorate its chemical accessibility, to optimize its absorption profiles, and to synthesize its more effective analogues which will ultimately lead towards potent drug candidates.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29853868 PMCID: PMC5954929 DOI: 10.1155/2018/9794625
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Pharmacol Sci ISSN: 1687-6334
Figure 1Natural sources of astragalin.
Plants containing astragalin as an important constituent with its biological properties.
| Name of the plant | Parts used/extract | Biological activities | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Botanical name | Common name | |||
|
| Shantung maple | — | — | [ |
|
| Mukdenia | Aerial parts | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| Hairy agrimony | Aerial parts | Antihemorrhagic, antiplatelet, antioxidant, and acetylcholinesterase inhibitory | [ |
|
| Wild garlic | Flowers | Antimicrobial | [ |
|
| Alpine leek | — | Antitumor | [ |
|
| Hook tryon | Leaves | Antixanthine oxidase | [ |
|
| Luobuma | Leaves | Lower blood pressure, antidepressant, antinephritis, and antineurasthenia | [ |
|
| — | Aerial parts | — | [ |
|
| Dwarf yellow milk vetch | Aerial parts | — | [ |
|
| Mysore thorn | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| Phog | Aerial parts | Antiulcer, anti-inflammatory, hypoglycemic, and antioxidant | [ |
|
| Tea | Leaves and seeds | Antidysentery, antihyperlipidemia, antihyperglycemia, and anti-inflammatory | [ |
|
| Downy safflower | Aerial parts | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| Ringworm bush | Leaves | Antioxidant, anti-infectious, and DNA repair | [ |
|
| Chinese bittersweet | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| Asiatic pennywort | Leaves | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
|
| Chinese glory bower | Roots | — | [ |
|
| Laennecia filaginoides | Aerial parts | Antiprotozoal | [ |
|
| Moroheiya | Leaves | Inhibits the histamine | [ |
|
| Chinese dodder | Seeds | Antiosteoporotic | [ |
|
| Australian dodder | Seeds | — | [ |
|
| Buttonweed | Whole plant | — | [ |
|
| Sundew | Antitussive | [ | |
|
| Sweet William | Aerial parts | Anti-inflammatory | [ |
|
| Hardy rubber tree | Leaves | Antidiabetic, antioxidant, and hypnotic effect | [ |
|
| Hemp agrimony | Aerial parts | — | [ |
|
| Aerial parts | — | [ | |
|
| Pearlbrush | — | — | [ |
|
| Coastal plain yellow tops | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| — | Flowers | — | [ |
|
| Gladiolus | Aerial parts | — | [ |
|
| European licorice | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| Chinese licorice | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| Longevity spinach | — | Antidiabetic | [ |
|
| English ivy | — | — | [ |
|
| Island rushrose | Aerial parts | — | [ |
|
| — | Whole plant | — | [ |
|
| Sea buckthorn | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| Sweet potato | Leaf | — | [ |
|
| Golden rain tree | Flowers | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| Wild leek | Leaves | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| — | Aerial parts | — | [ |
|
| Evergreen lindera | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| — | Leaves | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| — | Flowers | Anticomplement | [ |
|
| Drumstick tree | Leaves | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| White mulberry | Leaves | Hypoglycemic and antioxidant | [ |
|
| Forest star | Leaves | [ | |
|
| Sacred lotus | Leaves | Lipolytic activity | [ |
|
| Taily weed | Aerial parts | — | [ |
|
| Rock pine | — | Calpain inhibitory activity | [ |
|
| Japanese persimmon | Leaves | Angiotensin converting enzyme activity, and inhibition of atopic dermatitis (AD) | [ |
|
| Field briar | Leaves | Anti-inflammatory and antioxidant | [ |
|
| — | Fruits | — | [ |
|
| Common bean | — | [ | |
|
| — | Aerial parts | Antiallergic | [ |
|
| — | Leaves | Antibacterial and anti-inflammatory | [ |
|
| — | Antiulcer | [ | |
|
| Knotweed | Aerial parts | DPPH-free radical scavenging activity | [ |
|
| European bird cherry | Flowers and leaves | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| Black cherry | Leaves and flowers | — | [ |
|
| Oregon pine | Needles | Cytotoxic | [ |
|
| Milk vetch root | Roots | Antidiabetic | [ |
|
| Sumach | Stems and leaves | Antiosteoporotic | [ |
|
| Shrub rose | Flowers | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| Ronce blanche | Aerial parts | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| Chinese tallow | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| Arghel | Aerial parts | Antibacterial | [ |
|
| Canada goldenrod | — | Antioxidant | [ |
|
| Lutescens | Leaves | — | [ |
|
| — | Whole plant | Antimicrobial and anti-inflammatory | [ |
|
| Foam flower | Whole plant | — | [ |
|
| Confederate jasmine | Leaves | Antifungal | [ |
|
| — | Fruits | — | [ |
|
| — | — | Antibacterial | [ |
|
| Few flowered vetch | Aerial parts | Hepatoprotective | [ |
|
| — | Whole plant | Inhibitor of the complement system | [ |
Figure 2Biological activities of astragalin.
Anti-inflammatory activities of astragalin in vitro and in vivo.
| Assay | Organism tested | Dose/concentration | Molecular targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LPS-induced mouse mastitis | Mouse mastitis | 10, 25, and 50 mg/kg | TNF- | [ |
| LPS-induced endotoxemia and lung injury in mice | Mice (lung) | 25, 50, and 75 mg/kg | TNF- | [ |
| LPS-induced macrophages in mice | Mouse cells | 1–100 | iNOS↓, COX-2↓,TNF- | [ |
| LPS-induced RAW 264.7 cells. | Mice (RAW 264.7 cells) | 1, 10, and 100 | NO↓ and TNF- | [ |
| Inhibitory activity on the histamine release by KU812 cells | KU812 cells | 10 to 30 | IL-4↓, IL-13↓, and (IFN- | [ |
| LPS-induced inflammation in RAW 264.7 cells | Mice (RAW 264.7 cells) | NO┴, IL-6┴, and PGE2┴ | [ | |
|
| Human gingival epithelial cells | COX-2┴, IL-6┴, IL-8┴, MMP-1┴, MMP-3┴, PGE-2┴, and IL-4┴ | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory effects on | Uterine and endometrial epithelial cells of mice | 100 | TNF- | [ |
| Protective effects against ovalbumin- (OVA-) induced allergic inflammation | Mouse model of allergic asthma | 0.5 mg/kg and 1 mg/kg | SOCS-3┴, SOCS-5┴, and IFN- | [ |
| Alleviation in hepatic fibrosis function | Diabetic rats and nondiabetic rats | PAR2┴, IL-1 | [ | |
| Prevention from atopic dermatitis | NC/Nga mice | 1.5 mg/kg | IgE↓ | [ |
↑Upregulation; ↓downregulation; ┴inhibition.
Antioxidant activity of astragalin in vitro and in vivo.
| Assay | Organism tested | Dose/concentration | Molecular targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Free radical-scavenging activity | 1, 3, 10, 30, 100, or 300 | [ | ||
| Inhibitory activity against autophagy-associated airway epithelial fibrosis | Mice | 1–20 | E-cadherin┴, vimentin┴, Beclin-1↓, LC3A/B↓, EMT↓, and TGF- | [ |
| Apoptotic and eosinophilia amelioration | BEAS-2B cells | 1–20 | TLR-4↓, Eotaxin-1↓, PLC | [ |
| Suppression of 6-hydroxydopamine-induced neurotoxicity in |
| 2.0 mg/mL |
| [ |
| Neuroprotective effect against ischemic brain injury | Wister rats | 5 mg/kg and 15 mg/kg | NCam↑ | [ |
↑Upregulation; ↓downregulation; ┴inhibition.
Cosmetic uses of astragalin.
| Assay | Organism tested | Dose/concentration | Molecular targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inhibition of melanin secretion |
| 10 mM | MMP-1┴ | [ |
| Protection against UV damage | Mice (BalB/c) and human keratinocyte cells (HaCaT cells) | 2.5 mg/kg and 0.25 | CXCL-1↓ and CXCL-2↓ | [ |
↓Downregulation; ┴inhibition.
Anticancer activities of astragalin in vitro and in vivo.
| Type of cancer | Cell line | Dose/concentration | Molecular targets | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Leukemia | HL-60 | 6 ± 1 | Bax↑, Bcl-2↓, caspase-3/-7Act, JNK/SAPK┴, and ERK 1/2┴ | [ |
| Hepatocellular | HepG2, Huh-7, and H22 | — | HK2┴ and miR-125b↑ | [ |
| Skin | HaCaT, A375P, and SK-MEL-2 | 50 and 100 | p38 MAPK↓, phospho-MSK1↓, | [ |
| Lung | A549, H1299, H226, H838, H23, H1437, H125, H2009, and H2087 | 5, 40 | Bax:Bcl-2↑, caspase-9/-3↑, p-IKK- | [ |
| Breast | ZR-75-1, T47D, BT20, MCF-1, and MCF-7 | — | DDH┴, DRP-1↓, pro-caspase-3/-8↑, and Bax↑ | [ |
| Gastric | AGS, SC-M1, NUGC-1, NUGC-3, and KOTA-III | — | DDH┴, DRP-1↓ pro-caspase-3/-8↑, and Bax↑ | [ |
↑Upregulation; ↓downregulation; ┴inhibition.
Figure 3A diagrammatic representation of molecular targets and mechanism of action of astragalin. Astragalin has capability to modulate various transcriptional factors, enzymes, protein kinases, cell adhesion molecules, apoptotic and antiapoptotic proteins, and inflammatory cytokines resulting in anticancer, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and cardioprotective activities.