| Literature DB >> 32370025 |
Alessandra Durazzo1, Massimo Lucarini1, Amirhossein Nazhand2, Selma B Souto3, Amélia M Silva4,5, Patrícia Severino6,7,8, Eliana B Souto9,10, Antonello Santini11.
Abstract
Carnitine can be considered a conditionally essential nutrient for its importance in human physiology. This paper provides an updated picture of the main features of carnitine outlining its interest and possible use. Particular attention has been addressed to its beneficial properties, exploiting carnitine's properties and possible use by considering the main in vitro, in animal, and human studies. Moreover, the main aspects of carnitine-based dietary supplements have been indicated and defined with reference to their possible beneficial health properties.Entities:
Keywords: carnitine; food supplements; in animal studies; in humans studies; in vitro studies; nutraceuticals
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32370025 PMCID: PMC7249051 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25092127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Chemical structure of L-carnitine.
Figure 2Chemical structure of acetyl-l-carnitine and propionyl-l-carnitine.
Figure 3Overview of carnitine biological activities.
An up-to-date picture of in vitro studies of l-carnitine.
| Condition | Activity | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Anticancer effects | Reduced the levels of methylmalonicacidemia and Propionic acidemia in peripheral leukocytes. | [ |
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| Antioxidant effects | [ | |
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| Antioxidant effects | Inhibited acrylamide-induced genotoxicity in human lymphocytes through the improvement of oxidative stress. | [ |
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| Antioxidant effects | Inhibited ROS production and reduced antioxidant activity. | [ |
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| Anti-aging effect | Decreased epigenetic modification of hTERT gene promoter and the numbers of senescent cells, and increased activity of telomerase. | [ |
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| Hepatoprotective effect | Inhibited the inflammatory mediator iNOS through the suppression of NF-kB activity in IL-1β-stimulated hepatocytes. | [ |
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| Anti-angiogenic effect | Suppressed the activation of ICAM-1 and NF-kB and down-regulated the activation of FAK, CXCR4, CXCL12, VEGFR2 and VEGF pathways. | [ |
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| Neuroprotective effect | Inhibited methamphetamine-induced activation of MMP-9 | [ |
An updated picture of studies based on l-carnitine conducted inanimal models.
| Condition | Activity | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effects | Symptom improvement observed by inducing potential function of the CNS and short-term plasticity. | [ |
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effects | Impeded age-related mitochondrial dysfunction by reducing oxidative stress, age-related alterations of mitochondrial dynamics and biogenesis, and activation of PGC-1α/β coactivators. | [ |
| In-animal model | Anti-diabetic effects | An improvement of glucose metabolism in mice with insulin resistant | [ |
| In-animal model | Anti-diabetic effects | Reduction in the serum levels of adiponectin. | [ |
| In-animal model | Anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant effects | Managed histological and inflammation damage, apoptosis, mitochondrial dysfunction and arsenic-induced hepatotoxicity. | [ |
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effect | Upregulation of | [ |
| In-animal model | Cardioprotective effect | Controlled the cardiac toxicity induced by 75- and 150-mg/Kg BW aspartme. | [ |
| In-animal model | Anti-obesity effect | Reduction in elevated plasma lipids in obese Zucker rats. | [ |
| In-animal model | Immunostimulatory and radioprotective role | Reduced sperm abnormalities, modified severe tubular degeneration and increased serum testosterone levels. | [ |
| In-animal model | Enhanced exercise endurance | Reduced body fat, increased maximum running time, and elevated mitochondrial biogenesis, oxidative metabolism and fatty acid adsorption. | [ |
| In-animal model | Cardioprotective effect | Inhibited 6-Gy γ-radiation-induced toxicity. | [ |
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effect | Prevented NaAsO2-induced oxidative damage in rat. | [ |
| In-animal model | Treatment of muscle atrophy | Prevented muscle atrophy by inhibiting the ubiquitin proteasome pathway. | [ |
| In-animal model | Anti-atherosclerosis effect | Prevented the production of trimethylamine N-oxide. | [ |
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effect | Decreased the oxidative stress at least in the heart of oophorectomized rats. | [ |
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effect | Decreased acrylamide-toxicity in spleen and thymus tissues in mice. | [ |
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effect | [ | |
| In-animal model | Antioxidant effect | Reduction in PCC (protein oxidation marker), TBARS (lipid peroxidation marker), caspase-3, DNA fragmentation, cyclobutane pyrimidine dimers, 8-oxo-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-oxo-dG) as well as proinflammatory cytokines IL-1β, IL-6, and TNF-α downregulation, upregulation of PCNA (DNA repair proliferating cell nuclear antigen) protein, removed c-Fos and oxidative stress-sensitive signaling protein p38. | [ |
An up-to-date picture of in vivo studies of l-carnitine.
| Condition | Activity | Administration | Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clinical trial | Cardioprotective effect | Daily oral | Enhancement of cardiac efficiency, restoration of cardiac energy metabolism, and elimination of toxic mitochondrial products. | [ |
| Clinical trial | Cardioprotective effect | Reduced serum levels of cystatin C, BMP4 and OPN as well as increased serum levels of carnitine. | [ | |
| Clinical trial | Anti-inflammatory effects | Administration of carnitine (250 mg/day) in females with polycystic ovary syndrome for 12 weeks | Decreased carotid intima-media thickness (CIMT) and plasma nitric oxide. | [ |
| Clinical trial | Antioxidant effect | Elevated sulfhydryls and ascorbic acid uptake, preserved glutathione level, enhanced sulfhydryls and ascorbic acid levels, preserved lipid peroxidation, haemolysis and haemoglobin, and modulated antioxidants. | [ | |
| Clinical trial | Antioxidant effects | Administration of | Prevented oxidative damage and increased the removal of toxic metabolites in patients with type I glutaric aciduria. | [ |
| Clinical trial | Embryonic development effect | Administration of | An improvement of oocyte developmental competence in patients with | [ |
| Clinical trial | Anti-anemia effect | The administration of | A restoration and normalized circulation of plasma free carnitine (FC) levels | [ |
| Clinical trial | Anti-autism effect | Administration of | An improvement of autism symptoms based on autism treatment evaluation checklist (ATEC) scores, modified clinical global impression (CGI), and childhood autism rating scale (CARS) | [ |
| Clinical trial | Anti-autism effect | Administration of | An enhancement of total and free carnitine levels, a reduction of autism severity and an improvement of autistic behavior | [ |
| Clinical trial | Anti-autism effect | Administration of | A gradual improvement of autism symptoms | [ |