| Literature DB >> 31061668 |
Mao-Qiang Man1,2, Bin Yang1, Peter M Elias2.
Abstract
Hesperidin is a bioflavonoid, with high concentration in citrus fruits. In addition to its well-known benefits for cardiovascular function, type II diabetes, and anti-inflammation, recent studies have demonstrated multiple benefits of hesperidin for cutaneous functions, including wound healing, UV protection, anti-inflammation, antimicrobial, antiskin cancer, and skin lightening. In addition, hesperidin enhances epidermal permeability barrier homeostasis in both normal young and aged skin. The mechanisms by which hesperidin benefits cutaneous functions are attributable to its antioxidant properties, inhibition of MAPK-dependent signaling pathways, and stimulation of epidermal proliferation, differentiation, and lipid production. Because of its low cost, wide availability, and superior safety, hesperidin could prove useful for the management of a variety of cutaneous conditions.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31061668 PMCID: PMC6466919 DOI: 10.1155/2019/2676307
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Hesperidin content in citrus fruits.
| Species | Geographic Site of Cultivation | Extraction Solvent | Peel (mg/g dried) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| C. reticulate “Erythrosa” | Shimen County, Hunan, China | Methanol | 74.236 ± 0.845 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Unshiu” | Chahe, Hubei, China | Methanol | 60.540 ± 0.763 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Unshiu” | Yangshuo County, Guangxi, China | Methanol | 70.232 ± 0.487 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Subcompressa” | Yongquan, Zhejiang, China | Methanol | 100.525 ± 1.398 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Subcompressa” | Huangyan, Zhejiang, China | Methanol | 62.678 ± 0.697 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Gujin, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | Methanol | 62.919 ± 0.543 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Huicheng, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | Methanol | 59.012 ± 0.787 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Luokeng, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | Methanol | 74.973 ± 0.845 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Daze, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | Methanol | 54.075 ± 0.578 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Yamen, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | Methanol | 88.087 ± 1.062 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Shuangshui, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | Methanol | 51.921 ± 0.768 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Siqian Town, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | Methanol | 50.137 ± 0.301 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Gujing, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | 50% Method | 37 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Meijiang, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | 50% Method | 42 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Wengyuan,Shaoguan, Guangdong, China | 50% Method | 79 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Xiaogan, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | 50% Method | 30 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Shuangshui, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | 50% Method | 53 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Wengyuan, Shaoguan, Guangdong, China | 50% Method | 66 | [ |
| C. reticulate “Chachi” | Shuangshui, Jiangmen, Guangdong, China | 50% Method | 46 | [ |
| C. Sinensis (linn.) Osbeck | North of Iran | Petrolatum ether first, followed by methanol | 5.2-6.2 | [ |
| C. Sinensis | North of Iran | 5.2-6.1 | [ | |
| C. reticulate Blanco | North of Iran | 4.5-6.1 | [ | |
| C. unshiu Marc | North of Iran | 1.3-5.8 | [ | |
| C. unshiu Marc | Neretva Valley, Croatia | 1.2M HCI in 80% methanol/water | 0.42 | [ |
| C. reticulate Blanco | Neretva Valley, Croatia | 0.47 | [ | |
| lemon juice | Adana, Turkey |
| [ | |
| Pulp removing | Adana, Turkey |
| [ | |
| Pasteurization | Adana, Turkey |
| [ | |
| lemon | Spain |
| [ | |
| Grapefruit | Spain |
| [ |
Content in juice.
Benefits of hesperidin on cutaneous functions.
| Animal Models/Human Diseases/Cells | Treatment | Benefits | Mechanisms | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Young mice | Topical applications of 2% hesperidin twice-daily for 6 days. | ↑Acute barrier recovery | ↑ Proliferation; | [ |
| Aged mice | Topical applications of 2% hesperidin twice-daily for 9 days. | ↑ Acute barrier recovery; | ↑ Differentiation; | [ |
| Glucocorticoid-treated mice | One hour after each topical application of 0.05% clobetasol propionate, 2% hesperidin was applied. Treatments were twice-daily for 9 days | ↑ Acute barrier recovery; | ↑ Proliferation; | [ |
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| Keratinocytes | Keratinocytes first treated with 50 | ↓ DNA damage | ↓ Absorb UVB | [ |
| Keratinocytes were treated with hesperidin (220 | ↑ Cell viability | ↑ SOD activity | [ | |
| Keratinocytes were treated with hesperidin (50, 100, 200, 400, 600, 1 000mg/L) for 24 hr, followed by UVB irradiation (15 mJ/cm2). | ↓ CXCR2 expression | Not determined | [ | |
| Dermal fibroblasts | Fibroblasts irradiated with UVA at dose 10 J/cm2 and treated with hesperetin containing extract at various concentration for 72 hr | ↓ Matrix metalloproteinase expression | Not determined | [ |
| Pretreated fibroblasts with 3 and 30 | ↓ Necrotic cell death | Not determined | [ | |
| Mice | Mice treated topically with hesperidin (3 mg/ml) daily for 10 days, 30 min after each application of hesperidin, mice were irradiated with 180 mJ/cm2 UVB. | ↓ Skin erythema & edema | ↑ Catalase and superoxide dismutase activity | [ |
| Mice were treated topically 1% hesperidin methyl chalcone before and after one irradiation with 4.14 mJ/cm2 UVB | ↓ Cytokine expression | ↑ Nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; | [ | |
| Hesperidin methyl chalcone at the dose of 300 mg/kg was intraperitoneally given 1 hr before and 7 hr after, irradiation with 4.14 mJ/cm2 UVB | ↓ Skin edema, neutrophil recruitment and matrix metalloproteinase-9 activity; | ↑ Glutathione levels and catalase activity. | [ | |
| Orally administered 0.1 mL of water containing 100 mg/kg body weight hesperidin daily, while mice were irradiated 3 times at 48 h intervals per week for 12 weeks. Does of UVB were increased 60 mJ/cm2 per exposure at week 1 to 90 mJ/cm2 at week 7. | ↓ Transepidermal water loss; | ↓ Phosphorylation of mitogen activated protein kinase & extracellular signal-regulated kinases | [ | |
| Single UVB irradiation at dose of 180 mJ/cm2 | ↓ Cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers; | Not determined | [ | |
| Guinea pigs | The dorsal skin was exposed to UVB 3 times a week (every other day) for 2 consecutive weeks. The total energy dose of UVB was 1 J/cm2 per exposure. One week later, 1% hesperetin was topically applied daily to the hyperpigmented areas (2 mg/cm2) for 4 successive weeks. | ↓ Transepidermal water loss; | Not determined | [ |
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| B16 mouse melanoma cells | Cells incubated with 20 | ↑ Melanin content; | ↑ Melanogenesis-related proteins; | [ |
| Cells incubated with hesperidin (32.25mg/mL) for 3 days | Minimum inhibition of melanogenesis | Not determined | [ | |
| Cells were treated with hesperidin (50, 100, 200, 400, 600, 1000mg/L) for 24 hr, followed by UVB irradiation (15 mJ/cm2). | ↓ Tyrosinase activity; | Not determined | [ | |
| Cells incubated with 5-20 | ↑ Melanin content; | Not determined | [ | |
| Cells incubated with 50 | ↓ Melanin content; | ↓ Melanogenesis-related proteins; | [ | |
| Cells incubated with | ↓ Melanin content; | ↓ Microphthalmia-associated transcription factor (MITF) proteins | [ | |
| Human epidermal melanocytes | Cells incubated with 3-50 | ↑ Melanin content; | Not determined | [ |
| Cells incubated with 50 | ↓ Melanin content; | Not determined | [ | |
| Cells incubated with 0.4mg/ml | ↓ Tyrosinase activity | Not determined | [ | |
| Enzymatic assay of mushroom tyrosinase | ↓ Tyrosinase activity | Not determined | [ | |
| 1mg/ml of | Not determined | [ | ||
| 1.75 mg/ml of calamondin peel extract,containing hesperidin, induced 90% inhibition of tyrosinase activity | Not determined | [ | ||
| Guinea pigs | The dorsal skin was exposed to UVB 3 times a week (every other day) for 2 consecutive weeks. The total energy dose of UVB was 1 J/cm2 per exposure. One week later, 1% hesperetin was topically applied daily to the hyperpigmented areas (2 mg/cm2) for 4 successive weeks. | ↓ Pigmentation | Not determined | [ |
| Reconstructed human epidermis | The epidermis was treated topically with 0.2% hesperidin for 14 days | ↓ Pigmentation | Not determined | [ |
| Humans | Topical applications of cream containing 0.4 mg/ml | >8% increase in skin brightening | Not determined | [ |
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| Dermal fibroblast | Fibroblasts were incubated with mixture containing 0·05 mg/ml hesperidin for 24 or 96 hr. | ↑ Wound closure. | ↑ Collagen synthesis | [ |
| Diabetic rats | After wound, rats were given oral hesperidin (25-100 mg/kg body weight) for 21 days. | ↓ Wound closure. | ↑ VEGF-c, Ang-1/Tie-2, TGF- | [ |
| After wound, rats were given oral hesperidin (10-80 mg/kg body weight) for 20 days. | ↑ Wound closure. | ↑ VEGFR1 and VEGFR2 levels; | [ | |
| Humans with venous ulcers | Fifteen patients were treated orally with diosmin/hesperidin (450/50 mg, twice daily) for 90 days. Another 15 patients treated with pycnogenol (50 mg orally, 3 times daily) served as controls | No differences in wound healing time between two groups | Not determined | [ |
| Fifty-three patients received Daflon 500 mg, and 52 received placebo for 2 months | ↓ Wound healing time; | Not determined | [ | |
|
| Mice were given oral hesperidin (100mg/kg body weight) once 1 hr before | ↑ Wound contraction; | ↑ NO; | [ |
| Mice given 1, 2, 5 or 10 % of hesperidin ointment topically covering the whole excision wounds, twice daily after exposure to 6 Gy | ↑ Wound contraction; | Anti-oxidative stress | [ | |
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| Mouse RAW 264.7 cell line | Incubated with hesperidin (5-250 | ↓ Lipopolysaccharide-induced nitric oxide production | Not determined | [ |
| Incubated with hesperidin or hesperetin (40-100 | ↓ Antioxidative stress; | ↓ NF‐ | [ | |
| Keratinocytes | Keratinocytes treated with HES (20 | ↓ IL-8 protein & mRNA; | ↓ NF‐ | [ |
| Cells were incubated with both heat-killed Propionibacterium acnes and 5-50 | ↓ IL-8 protein & mRNA; | Not determined | [ | |
| Human skin explants | Human skin explants were pre-incubated with hesperidin methyl chalcone (0.2 mg/ml) and then stimulated with SP for 24 hours. | ↓ Proportion of dilated vessels; | Not determined | [ |
| Rats | Thirty min prior to carrageenan or dextran injection, hesperidin (50 or 100 mg/kg body weight) was subcutaneous injected | ↓ Edema | Not determined | [ |
| Mice | Intraperitoneal injection of hesperidin (75 mg/kg), following by subcutaneous injection of carrageenan | ↓ Edema | Not determined | [ |
| Guinea pigs | Hesperidin (40mg/kg) was orally given 1 hr prior to injection of carrageenan. | ↓ Edema | Not determined | [ |
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| A431 human skin carcinoma cells | Incubation of cells with hesperetin (10,100,500 | ↑ DNA fragmentation; | ↑ ERK, JNK, p38, ROS | [ |
| Cells treated with hesperidin (10, 25 and 50 | ↓ Cell viability; | ↑ ROS | [ | |
| Mice | Subcutaneous injection of 125 | ↓ Incidence of tumor and number of tumor per mouse | Not determined | [ |
Note: SOD: superoxide dismutase; GSH: reduced glutathione: NO: nitric oxide (NO); PGE2: prostaglandin E2; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; MPO: myeloperoxidase; MDA: malondialdehyde; COX2: cyclooxygenase-2, COX-2; SP: substance P; DMBA: 7,12-dimethylbenz[a]anthracene; TPA: 12-O-tetradecanoyl-13-phorbol acetate; ROS: reactive oxygen species; ERK: extracellular signal-regulated kinase; JNK: c-Jun NH2-terminal kinase; CDK2: cyclin-dependent kinase 2.