| Literature DB >> 31293414 |
Muhammad Ayaz1, Abdul Sadiq1, Muhammad Junaid1,2, Farhat Ullah1, Muhammad Ovais3,4, Ikram Ullah5, Jawad Ahmed6, Muhammad Shahid7.
Abstract
Modern research has revealed that dietary consumption of flavonoids and flavonoids-rich foods significantly improve cognitive capabilities, inhibit or delay the senescence process and related neurodegenerative disorders including Alzheimer's disease (AD). The flavonoids rich foods such as green tea, cocoa, blue berry and other foods improve the various states of cognitive dysfunction, AD and dementia-like pathological alterations in different animal models. The mechanisms of flavonoids have been shown to be mediated through the inhibition of cholinesterases including acetylcholinesterase (AChE), and butyrylcholinesterase (BChE), β-secretase (BACE1), free radicals and modulation of signaling pathways, that are implicated in cognitive and neuroprotective functions. Flavonoids interact with various signaling protein pathways like ERK and PI3-kinase/Akt and modulate their actions, thereby leading to beneficial neuroprotective effects. Moreover, they enhance vascular blood flow and instigate neurogenesis particularly in the hippocampus. Flavonoids also hamper the progression of pathological symptoms of neurodegenerative diseases by inhibiting neuronal apoptosis induced by neurotoxic substances including free radicals and β-amyloid proteins (Aβ). All these protective mechanisms contribute to the maintenance of number, quality of neurons and their synaptic connectivity in the brain. Thus flavonoids can thwart the progression of age-related disorders and can be a potential source for the design and development of new drugs effective in cognitive disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid beta; antioxidant; cholinesterases; polyphenols; signaling pathways and cognition
Year: 2019 PMID: 31293414 PMCID: PMC6606780 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2019.00155
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Figure 1The major classes of flavonoids and their dietary sources.
Figure 2The chemical structures of major classes of flavonoids.
Figure 3The major isoflavones and their chemical structures.
Figure 4The chemical structures of major flavones derived from natural and synthetic origin.
Figure 5The major naturally occurring flavonols.
Figure 6The chemical structures of important isolated flavanones.
Figure 7The important members of the flavanonols class of flavonoids.
Figure 8The major flavanols derived from natural sources.
Figure 9The probable mechanism of flavonoids activating non-amyloidogenic pathway through stimulation of α, γ secretases activities, while inhibiting the neurotoxic amylogenic pathway by inhibition of BACE-1 enzyme.
Figure 10The probable mechanisms of flavonoids in inhibiting different signaling pathways implicated in the formation of neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) and amyloid plaques (Aβ).
Figure 11The probable mechanisms of flavonoids stimulating/inhibiting signaling pathways implicated in cognitive performance and neurodegeneration.
Figure 12The PI3-kinases activation mediated neuroprotective action of flavonoids.
Figure 13The probable abridged mechanism of flavonoids in enhancing cognition and suppression of neurodegeneration.
Summary of the prospective neuropharmacological activities of essential oils and bioactive compounds isolated from medicinal plants.
| Flavonoid/s | Source | Study design | Results | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anthocyanin flavonoids | Bilberry | APP/PS1 model of AD | ↓ Behavioral abnormalities | Vepsäläinen et al. ( |
| Nobiletin | Citrus Flavonoid/ | Transgenic AD model ELISA study p38/STAT-1 pathway | ↓ Aβ load in hippocampus | Hernandez-Montes et al. ( |
| Epigalocatechin | Green Tea | Antioxidant assays | ↑ Metal ions chelation | Lee et al. ( |
| Luteolin | Citrus | APP Tg neuronal cells | ↓ Formation of Aβ peptides | Rezai-Zadeh et al. ( |
| Myricetin | Vegetables | AChE inhibition ssay | ↓ BACE1 activity, Interrupt fibrillization | Leclerc et al. ( |
| Quercetin Wogonin | Fruits, Nuts etc., | PI3-kinase inhibitory activity | ↓ Akt/PKB signaling pathways | Lee et al. ( |
| Blueberry | Blueberry | Chronic animals study | ↑ HC Akt phosphorylation | Lau et al. ( |
| Isoflavones | Soy foods | AD animal models | ↑ BDNF | Finkbeiner et al. ( |
| 127 Flavonoids including, Silibinin Genistein, Apigenin, kaempferol, NaringinQuercetin, Diosmin, Silymarin | Foods | Cholinesterase inhibition assays | ↓AChE activity | Orhan et al. ( |
↑, Increase/activate; ↓, Decrease/inhibit; HP, hippocampus; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; ACh, Acetylcholine; LPS, Lipopolysaccharide; INF-γ, Interferon-gamma-gamma; BDNF, Brain derived neurotrophic factor; NGF, Nerve growth factor; Arc/Arg3.1, activity-regulated cytoskeletal-associated protein; BACE1, Beta amyloid cleaving enzyme-1; MWM, Morris water Maze; NO, Nitrous Oxide.