| Literature DB >> 29872270 |
Zhifeng Zhong1, Jing Han1, Jizhou Zhang1, Qing Xiao1, Juan Hu1,2, Lidian Chen1,2.
Abstract
The primary objective of this review article was to summarize comprehensive information related to the neuropharmacological activity, mechanisms of action, toxicity, and safety of salidroside in medicine. A number of studies have revealed that salidroside exhibits neuroprotective activities, including anti-Alzheimer's disease, anti-Parkinson's disease, anti-Huntington's disease, anti-stroke, anti-depressive effects, and anti-traumatic brain injury; it is also useful for improving cognitive function, treating addiction, and preventing epilepsy. The mechanisms underlying the potential protective effects of salidroside involvement are the regulation of oxidative stress response, inflammation, apoptosis, hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal axis, neurotransmission, neural regeneration, and the cholinergic system. Being free of side effects makes salidroside potentially attractive as a candidate drug for the treatment of neurological disorders. It is evident from the available published literature that salidroside has potential use as a beneficial therapeutic medicine with high efficacy and low toxicity to the central nervous system. However, the definite target protein molecules remain unclear, and clinical trials regarding this are currently insufficient; thus, guidance for further research on the molecular mechanisms and clinical applications of salidroside is urgent.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Parkinson’s disease; clinical trials; cognitive impairment; salidroside; stroke
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29872270 PMCID: PMC5973445 DOI: 10.2147/DDDT.S160776
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Des Devel Ther ISSN: 1177-8881 Impact factor: 4.162
Figure 1Chemical structure of salidroside, 2-(4-hydroxyphenyl) ethyl-β-d-glucopyranoside (molecular formula: C14H20O7; molecular weight: 300.31; CAS registry number: 10338-51-9; PubChem CID: 159278).
Abbreviations: CAS, Chemical Abstracts Service; CID, Compound Identifier.
Figure 2Salidroside has been receiving increasing interest in the scientific community. In total, about 300 scientific publications on salidroside can be found in the literature from 1992 to 2017.
Note: *References from PubMed.
Summary of the neuropharmacological effects of salidroside
| Effect | Inducer | Functions | Dose | Animal/cell line | In vivo/in vitro | Regimen duration | Control |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anti-AD | Aβ1–42 | ↑: Antioxidant pathway | 1, 5, 10, and 50 μg/mL | PC12 cells | In vitro | 3 h | Vitamin E |
| Aβ25–35 | ↓: Oxidative stress, apoptosis | 10, 50, and 100 μM | SH-SY5Y cells | In vitro | 24 h | N/A | |
| Aβ | ↑: PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling | 5, 100, and 200 μM | Primary neurons | In vitro | 24 h | Aricept | |
| Transgenes | ↑: Life span, locomotor activity, p-GSK-3β | 2, 6, and 20 μM | Drosophila | In vivo | 40 days | Aricept | |
| STZ | ↑: Neurogenesis | 1 mM | NSCs | In vitro | 12 h | Catalase | |
| ↓: Cognitive impairment, inflammation, SIRT1/NF-κB signaling | 20 and 40 mg/kg (PO) | SD rats | In vivo | 28 days | N/A | ||
| Glutamate | ↓: Glutamate excitotoxic damage, Ca2+, calcium stores | 10−7, 10−6, and 10−5 mol/L | PC12 cells | In vitro | 24 h | N/A | |
| Glutamate | ↑: Akt pathway | 120 and 240 μM | Primary neurons | In vitro | 24 h | MADP | |
| H2O2 | ↑: Bcl-2 family | 1, 10, and 100 μM | PC12 cells | In vitro | 6, 9, or 12 h | N/A | |
| Hypoxia | ↓: Abnormal APP, BACE1 | 200 μM | SH-SY5Y cells | In vitro | 1 h | β-Secretase (inhibitor) | |
| Anti-PD | MPP+ | ↓: Apoptosis, ROS-NO-related mitochondrial pathway | 10, 50, and 100 μM | PC12 cells | In vitro | 24 h | L-NMMA |
| MPP+ | ↑: PI3K/Akt pathway | 1, 10, and 30 μM | PC12 cells | In vitro | 24 h | NGF, LY294002 (inhibitor) | |
| MPP+ | ↑: DJ-1-Nrf2-antioxidant pathway | 25, 50, and 100 μM | SH-SY5Y cells | In vitro | 24 h | N/A | |
| MPTP | ↑: PI3K/Akt/GSK3β signaling pathway | 15 and 45 mg/kg (IP) | C57BL/6 mice | In vivo | 7 days | N/A | |
| None | ↑: Dopaminergic neurons | 100 μg/mL | MSCs | In vitro | 1–12 days | Retinoic acid | |
| 6-OHDA | ↓: Endoplasmic reticulum stress | 25 μmol/L | SN4741 cells, primary neurons | In vitro | 10 h | 4-PBA | |
| Anti-stroke | 4VO | ↓: Cognitive impairment, cerebral edema degree, free radical abnormity | 12 mg/kg (IP) | SD rats | In vivo | 7 days | N/A |
| MCAO | ↓: Blood brain barrier, TNF-α | 24 mg/kg (IP) | SD rats | In vivo | 7 days | N/A | |
| MCAO | ↓: Infarct area, neurological deficit | 12 mg/kg (caudal vein) | SD rats | In vivo | 7 days | Tyrosol galactoside | |
| MCAO | ↑: Neuroplasticity-related genes | 50 mg/kg (IP) | SD rats | In vivo | 1, 2, and 6 days | C3aRA (antagonist) | |
| MCAO | ↑: Nrf2 pathway | 30 mg/kg (IP) | SD rats | In vivo | 1 day (twice) | N/A | |
| MCAO | ↓: Cerebral infarction, cerebral edema, inflammation, apoptosis | 20 and 40 mg/kg (PO) | SD rats | In vivo | 1 day | Clopidogrel | |
| I/R injury | ↓: Inflammation, apoptosis | 5, 10, and 20 μM | SH-SY5Y cells | In vitro | 6 h | Clopidogrel | |
| H2O2 | ↓: Apoptosis, oxidative stress | 100 μM | Primary neurons | In vitro | 24 h | Tyrosol galactoside | |
| CoCl | ↑: Neuroplasticity-related genes | 10 μM | PC12 cells | In vitro | 48 h | Egr4-targeted siRNA | |
| CoCl | ↓: Hypoxia damage, REDD1/mTOR/p70S6K signaling repression | 90 μM | PC12 cells | In vitro | 12 h | RAD001 (blocker) | |
| CoCl2 | ↑: HIF-1α | 120, 240, and 480 μM | Primary neurons | In vitro | 24 h | R59949 (inhibitor) | |
| LPS | ↓: Migration, NF-κB, and MAPK signaling | 75, 150, and 300 μM | BV2 cells | In vitro | 12 h | N/A | |
| Hypoglycemia, serum limitation | ↑: MMP | 2–320 μg/mL | PC12 cells | In vitro | 24 h | Adenosine, salidroside analogs | |
| Cognition enhancement | Hypoxia | ↑: Cognitive, mitochondrial biogenesis, pIRA and SIRT1 synergy | 25 mg/kg (PO) | SD rats | In vivo | 22 days | Disulfiram (antagonist) |
| Hypoxia, transgenes | ↑: Mitochondrial biogenesis, pIRA, and SIRTA synergy | 1.5 mM | Primary neurons | In vitro | 48 h | U0126 and GSK2110183 (antagonist) | |
| 2-VO | ↓: Cognitive impairment, apoptosis | 20 mg/kg (IP) | SD rats | In vivo | 34 days | N/A | |
| Old mice, transgenes | ↑: Learning and memory performance, plasticity, neurogenesis via CREB | 5 mg/kg (IV) | C57BL/6J mice | In vivo | 5 days | N/A | |
| None | ↑: Differentiation, proliferation | 1 μM | NSCs | In vitro | 1, 3, 4, and 8 days | N/A | |
| Collagen | ↓: Arthritic lesions, cognitive deficits, Rho/ROCK/NF-κB pathway | 20 and 40 mg/kg (PO) | SD rats | In vivo | 14 days | Leflunomide | |
| Isoflurane | ↓: Cognitive impairment, inflammatory response, oxidative stress, cholinergic system dysfunction | 60, 120, and 180 mg/kg (PO) | SD rats | In vivo | 6.5 h, 2 days | N/A | |
| Aβ1–40 | ↓: Cognitive deficits, oxidative stress, inflammatory mediators | 25, 50, and 75 mg/kg (PO) | SD rats | In vivo | 21 days | Huperzine A | |
| ↓: Cognitive impairment, neuroinflammation, apoptosis | 20 and 40 mg/kg (PO) | SD rats | In vivo | 28 days | N/A | ||
| Antidepressive and anxiolytic effects | Olfactory bulbectomy | ↓: Anti-inflammatory action, glucocorticoid receptor | 20 and 40 mg/kg (PO) | SD rat | In vivo | 14 days | Amitriptyline |
| LPS | ↑: Neurotransmitters, BDNF/TrkB signaling pathway | 12 and 24 mg/kg (IG) | ICR mice | In vivo | 5 days | Fluoxetine | |
| EPM test, OFT, TST | ↓: Anxiety-like and depression-like behavior | 25 mg/kg (IP) | C57B1/6J WT mice | In vivo | 1 day | N/A | |
| Ameliorating TBI | Contusion | ↑: Long-term functional recovery, histological outcomes, PI3K/Akt survival signaling | 20 and 50 mg/kg (IP) | C57BL/6 mice | In vivo | 1, 3, and 28 days | LY294002 (inhibitor) |
| Stretch | ↑: Viability (%) | 0.1, 1, 10, 20, 50 μM | Primary neurons | In vitro | 24 h | N/A | |
| None | ↑: Differentiation, BMP signaling | 5, 25, 50, and 100 μg/mL | D1 cells | In vitro | 12–72 h | DAPT, Noggin (antagonist) | |
| Anti-HD | Transgenes, paraquat | ↓: Neuronal death, behavioral dysfunction, oxidative stress | 50, 100, and 200 μM | In vivo | 0–120 h | EGCG | |
| Anti-addiction | Nicotine, CPP | ↓: Withdrawal syndrome, rewarding properties, relapse | 0.2 mg/kg (IG) | CD-1 mice | In vivo | 60 min before sessions | |
| Anti-epileptic | Kainic acid | ↑: Latency, AMPK/SIRT1/FoxO1 pathway | 25 and 50 mg/kg (IP) | C57BL/6 mice | In vivo | 75 min–2 days | Sirtinol (inhibitor) |
Notes: Upward arrows (↑) denote increase, upregulation, or activation; downward arrows (↓) denote decrease, downregulation, or suppression.
Abbreviations: 4-PBA, 4-phenylbutyrate; 4VO, 4-vessel occlusion; 6-OHDA, 6-hydroxydopamine; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; APP, amyloid precursor protein; Aβ, beta-amyloid; BACE, β-site APP cleaving enzyme; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; CREB, cAMP response element binding protein; CPP, conditioned place preference; cyt c, cytochrome c; DAPT, N-[N-(3,5-difluorophenacetyl)-l-alanyl]-S-phenylglycine t-butyl ester; EGCG, epigallocatechin gallate; EPM, elevated plus maze; HD, Huntington’s disease; HIF-1α, hypoxia-inducible factor-1α; HPA, hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal; ICR, Institute of Cancer Research; IG, intragastrically; IP, intraperitoneally; I/R, ischemia–reperfusion; IV, intravenous; LPS, lipopolysaccharide; MADP, N-((2R,3R,4R,5S,6R)-4,5-dihydroxy-6-(hydroxymethyl)-2-(4-methoxyphenethoxy)tetrahydro-2H-pyran-3-yl)acetamide; MCAO, middle cerebral artery occlusion; MMP, mitochondrial membrane potential; MPTP, 1-methyl-4-phenyl-1,2,5,6-tetrahydropyridine; MSCs, mesenchymal stem cells; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; N/A, not available/applicable; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa B; Nrf2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; NSCs, neural stem cells; OFT, open field test; PO, per os; PD, Parkinson’s disease; pIRA, phosphorylation of insulin receptor subunit A; REDD1, regulated in development and DNA damage response 1; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SD, Sprague-Dawley; STZ, streptozocin; TBI, traumatic brain injury; TH, tyrosine hydroxylase; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; TrκB, tropomyosin-related kinase B; TST, tail suspension test; WT, wild type.
Figure 3Schematic representation of the possible mechanisms underlying the neuroprotective role of salidroside.
Abbreviations: 5-HT, 5-hydroxytryptamine; Ach, acetylcholine; AchE, acetylcholinesterase; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; BMP, bone morphogenetic protein; ChAT, choline acetyltransferase; CREB, cAMP response element binding protein; GPX, glutathione peroxidase; GSH, glutathione; HD, Huntington’s disease; HPA, hypothalamus-pituitary-adrenal; HVA, homovanillic acid; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; IL-6, interleukin-6; IL-8, interleukin-8; iNOS, inducible nitric oxide synthase; MDA, malondialdehyde; NE, norephinephrine; NF-κB, nuclear factor kappa B; NGF, nerve growth factor; Nrf2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; NSCs, neural stem cells; PD, Parkinson’s disease; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SOD, superoxide dismutase; TBI, traumatic brain injury; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α.