| Literature DB >> 32235611 |
Javad Sharifi-Rad1, Célia F Rodrigues2, Farukh Sharopov3, Anca Oana Docea4, Aslı Can Karaca5, Mehdi Sharifi-Rad6, Derya Kahveci Karıncaoglu5, Gözde Gülseren7, Ezgi Şenol7, Evren Demircan7, Yasaman Taheri8, Hafiz Ansar Rasul Suleria9, Beraat Özçelik5,10, Kadriye Nur Kasapoğlu5, Mine Gültekin-Özgüven5, Ceren Daşkaya-Dikmen11, William C Cho12, Natália Martins13,14, Daniela Calina15.
Abstract
Heart and blood vessels disorders comprise one of the main causes of death worldwide. Pharmacologically active natural compounds have been used as a complementary therapy in cardiovascular disease around the world in a traditional way. Dietary, natural bioactive compounds, as well as healthy lifestyles, are considered to prevent coronary artery diseases. Pre-clinical and clinical studies reported that consumption of plant-food bioactive derivatives including polyphenolic compounds, peptides, oligosaccharides, vitamins, unsaturated fatty acids possess protective effects on cardiovascular diseases. This review aims to summarize the cardiovascular risk factors, pre-clinical studies and clinical trials related to cardioprotective properties of the plant-food-derived bioactive compounds. Molecular mechanisms by the natural bioactive compounds exert their cardiovascular protective properties have also been highlighted.Entities:
Keywords: arterial hypertension; atherosclerosis; cardio-protective pharmacotherapy; classical and emerging risk factors; coronary artery disease; diabetes; diet; food; lifestyle; plant-food bioactive compounds
Year: 2020 PMID: 32235611 PMCID: PMC7177934 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17072326
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Chemical structures of some omega-3 fatty acids.
Figure 2Schematic overview of CV risk factors, pathophysiology of CV diseases and the cardioprotective mechanisms and effects of plant-food derived bioactive compounds. Abbreviations: Cardiovascular (CV), Nitric oxide (NO), Reactive oxygen species (ROS), Interleukin-6 (IL-6), Janus tyrosine kinase 2(JAK2), Triglycerides (TG), Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE).
Benefits of Plant-derived Bioactive Constituents and Lifestyle Changes on Risk Factors in Cardiovascular Diseases.
| Cardiovascular Risk Factor | Pathophysiology | Benefit | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| sedentary lifestyle | ↑ insulin resistance, ↑ obesity, | lifestyle changes: physical activity lowers risk for CVDs mortality | [ |
| hypertension | ↑arterial hypertension and endothelial growth factor-linked polymorphisms, ↑vascular damage | berberine, green tea, cocoa, lycopene, aged garlic extract, resveratrol, grape seed extract, beetroot juice, olive oil and ascorbic acid: ↓blood pressure. | [ |
| smoking | ↑oxidative stress, ↑coronary spasm, | garlic extract, | [ |
| stress | disturbance of the hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis, ↑serum cortisol due to stress, | L-theanine from green tea: ↑relaxation, ↓post-stress cortisol | [ |
| obesity | ↑dyslipidemia, hypercoagulability, | polyphenols (grapes, tea, ginseng, red to purple color fruits) benefits: ↓platelet aggregation, ↓vascular inflammation, ↓apoptotis, ↓LDL oxidation | [ |
| diabetes | altering arterial walls increasing inflammation at the endothelial level, with the deposition of VLDL and LDL cholesterol particles at this level and the formation of atheroma plaque | mediterranean diet: ↓ risk of diabetes | [ |
| dyslipidemia | increasing of atherogenic effect deposits of atheroma plaques on the internal walls of medium and large arteries, with thickening of the arterial wall and loss of elasticity | phenolic compounds, flavonols: ↓TC, ↓LDLc, ↓TG levels | [ |
Abbreviations: cardiovascular diseases (CVDs), total cholesterol (TC), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLc), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLc), type II diabetes (T2D), interleukin (IL), tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFα), Angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE).
“In vitro” and “in vivo” preclinical studies - cardioprotective effects and molecular mechanisms of plant-food bioactives.
| Natural Compound | Model | Molecular Mechanism of Action | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids | neonatal cardiac myocytes | ↑endothelial function | [ |
| oleuropein | human LDL and Caco-2 cell lines | ↓prooxidative processes | [ |
| flavonoids | hepatocytes cell lines | ↓plasma lipids, ↑vascular inflammatory response reduction | [ |
| anthocyanins | H9C2 cardiomyocytes cell lines | cardioprotective effects on endothelial cell level, ↑vascular homeostasis | [ |
| aspalathin | H9C2 cardiomyocytes cell lines | reverse in metabolic abnormalities by activating ADIPOQ gene, while modulates Pparγ and SREBF 1/2 expression, ↓inflammation via Il6/Jak2 pathway | [ |
| cinnamic acid | H9C2 cardiomyocytes cell lines | ↑mitochondrial function | [ |
| dealcoholized red wine and cacao procyanidin trimers/pentamers | ↑PAC-1 binding, ↑P-selectin expression in blood | [ | |
| cocoa flavan-3-ols | human endothelial cells | ↓vascular arginase activity | [ |
| almond protein | human umbilical vascular endothelial cells | ↑ACE inhibitory peptides, antihypertensive effect | [ |
|
| |||
| sterols, tocopherols, phospholipids, phenols, coenzyme (Co) Q9 and Q10 | rats | ↓triglycerides, ↓cholesterol | [ |
| dichloromethanic fraction of mango leaves | spontaneously hypertensive rats | antihypertensive effect | [ |
| polyphenols | rats | ↑antioxidative activity against oxidative injury (especially for intestinal injury) | [ |
Abbreviations: low-density lipoprotein (LDL), matrix metalloproteinase2 (MMP-2), matrix metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (Pparγ), sterol regulatory element-binding transcription factor 1 (SREBF 1/2) expression, reactive oxygen species (ROS), procaspase-activating compound 1 (PAC-1), superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPx), glutathione (GSH).
Figure 3The structure of oleuropein.
Clinical Studies Related to Cardioprotective Effects of Plant-food Bioactive Compounds.
| Plant-Food Bioactive Compounds | Clinical Study | Results | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|
| polyphenols | observational study on three groups of patients with CVDs consuming mediterranean diet | ↑endothelial function and plasma lipid profiles | [ |
| pomegranate juice | single-blind study for hypertensive men | ↓blood pressure due to its ACE activity | [ |
| cranberry juice | a placebo-controlled crossover study in patients | ↓carotid femoral pulse wave velocity | [ |
| anthocyanins | a clinical study in hypertensive patients | anthocyanins did not exhibit anti-hypertensive activity in borderline hypertensive men | [ |
| blueberries | a double-blind, placebo-controlled study in subjects | blueberries did not affect blood pressure and insulin sensitivity | [ |
| red wine | randomized clinical trial | the ethanolic part of wine: ↑protective effect on the lipid profile | [ |
| virgin olive oil | randomized, crossover controlled clinical trial in | ↓ systolic blood pressure, ↓ diastolic blood pressure, glucose, ↓lipids | [ |
| sunflower-oil | clinical study of Spanish male patients with peripheral vascular disease | sunflower-oil-enriched diets didn’t protect LDL against oxidation | [ |
| nuts | randomized crossover study | ↓ blood cholesterol | [ |
| vegetables | randomized controlled clinical trial in patients with diabetes, metabolic syndrome without apparent disease | ↑antioxidant response, ↓oxidized LDLc | [ |
| whole-grain food | a clinical trial with 233 | ↓serum lipids, ↓blood pressure, ↑endothelial function, ↓oxidative stress, | [ |
| unsaturated | secondary prevention trial performed on post-myocardial infarction patients (DART) | total CV mortality ↓of 29% and a re-infarction of 32%. | [ |
| preventive clinical trial | EPA + DHA reduced cardiovascular mortality by 30%, coronary mortality by 35% and sudden death by 45%.; the effects occurred early (90 days for total mortality and 120 days for sudden death) and were 4 times stronger in patients with an ejection fraction below 40% | [ | |
| large-scale, randomized, double-blind clinical study | omega-3 fatty acids reduced cardiovascular mortality by 10%, sudden death by 7% and re-admission for ventricular arrhythmias by 28% | [ | |
| hypercholesterolemic patients | the sudden cardiac death, myocardial infarction, unstable angina and revascularization procedures, were reduced by 19% | [ | |
| a multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled study in post-myocardial infarction patients | dietary supplementation with ω3-PUFAs did not reduce the incidence of major ischemic or non-ischemic cardiovascular events, sudden cardiac death or interventions such as angioplasty or aortocoronary bypass | [ | |
| randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicenter trial included patients after myocardial infarction (OMEGA) | dietary supplementation with ω3-PUFAs has no additional beneficial effect compared to standard acute myocardial infarction therapy on overall mortality, the incidence of major cardio- or cerebrovascular events, or sudden cardiac death. | [ | |
| randomized double-blind, placebo-controlled | no reduction of cardiovascular risks in patients with a history of coronary heart disease or ischemic stroke. | [ | |
| randomized clinical trial in people at high risk of cardio- vascular disease and diabetes, impaired glucose tolerance or impaired fasting blood glucose (ORIGIN) | the study did not show a statistically significant reduction in overall mortality, major cardiovascular events, or mortality due to arrhythmia. | [ | |
| randomized trial in participants with stable angina | increased consumption of polyunsaturated fatty acid supplements was not beneficial in reducing cardiac deaths or sudden cardiac death, the use of fruits, vegetables and oats has no positive effect on cardiovascular risk factors | [ | |
| randomized controlled clinical trial in patients with diabetes, but without a history of cardiovascular disease (ASCEND) | the study did not show a decrease in mortality | [ | |
| a multicenter, randomized, double-blind controlled trial in patients with cardiovascular risk factors (diabetes) or cardiovascular disease | patients with hypertriglyceridemia recorded decreases in cardiovascular events compared to the placebo group major such as stroke or stroke (25%) and cardiovascular death (20%) | [ | |
| a randomized, placebo-controlled trial study | no reductions in strokes, CVDs mortality, cancer incidence, cancer mortality or all- cause mortality | [ |
Acronymss, abbreviations and symbols: ↑ (increase), ↓ (decrease), CV (cardiovascular), CVDs (cardiovascular diseases), Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme (ACE), DART (Diet and Reinfarction Trial), GISSI (Gruppo Italiano per lo Studio della Sopravvivenza nell´Infarcto Miocardio), JELIS (Japan EPA Lipid Intervention Study), SU.FOL.OM3 (SUpplementation with FOlate, vitamin B6 and B12 and/or OMega-3 fatty acids), DART 2 (Diet and Angina Randomized Trial), ASCEND (A Study of Cardiovascular Events in Diabetes), REDUCE-IT (Reduction of Cardiovascular events with EPA - Intervention Trial), VITAL (VITamin D and OmegA-3 TriaL).