| Literature DB >> 32630301 |
Md Abdul Hannan1,2, Raju Dash1, Md Nazmul Haque3, Md Mohibbullah4, Abdullah Al Mamun Sohag2, Md Ataur Rahman5, Md Jamal Uddin6,7, Mahboob Alam1,8, Il Soo Moon1.
Abstract
Beyond their significant contribution to the dietary and industrial supplies, marine algae are considered to be a potential source of some unique metabolites with diverse health benefits. The pharmacological properties, such as antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, cholesterol homeostasis, protein clearance and anti-amyloidogenic potentials of algal metabolites endorse their protective efficacy against oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, mitochondrial dysfunction, and impaired proteostasis which are known to be implicated in the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative disorders and the associated complications after cerebral ischemia and brain injuries. As was evident in various preclinical studies, algal compounds conferred neuroprotection against a wide range of neurotoxic stressors, such as oxygen/glucose deprivation, hydrogen peroxide, glutamate, amyloid β, or 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium (MPP+) and, therefore, hold therapeutic promise for brain disorders. While a significant number of algal compounds with promising neuroprotective capacity have been identified over the last decades, a few of them have had access to clinical trials. However, the recent approval of an algal oligosaccharide, sodium oligomannate, for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease enlightened the future of marine algae-based drug discovery. In this review, we briefly outline the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative diseases and brain injuries for identifying the targets of pharmacological intervention, and then review the literature on the neuroprotective potentials of algal compounds along with the underlying pharmacological mechanism, and present an appraisal on the recent therapeutic advances. We also propose a rational strategy to facilitate algal metabolites-based drug development.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Parkinson’s disease; computer-aided drug discovery; ischemic stroke; neuroprotection; seaweed; secondary metabolites
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32630301 PMCID: PMC7401253 DOI: 10.3390/md18070347
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Figure 1Chemical structure of sterols (A) and plastoquinones (B) of marine algae.
Figure 2Chemical structure of phlorotannin of marine algae.
Figure 3Chemical structure of alkaloids (A), sesquiterpenes (B) and polysaccharides (C) of marine algae.
Figure 4Chemical structure of miscellaneous compounds from marine algae.
Summary on pharmacological effects, occurrence, effective dose, experimental model, cellular effects, potential pharmacological mechanism of algal metabolites.
| Pharmacological Effects | Compound (Class) | Algal Source If Any) | Effective Concentration | Experimental Model (In Vivo/In Vitro) | Cellular Effects/Significant Findings | Signaling Pathways Involved | Pharmacological Markers | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antioxidant activity | Fucoxanthin (carotenoids) |
| 50 and 100 μM | H2O2-induced cell damage in kidney fibroblast cells | Attenuates oxidative stress | n.d. | ↓ROS level | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | 5, 10, and 50 μM | H2O2 induced BV2 microglial cells | Antioxidation | Antioxidant pathway | ↓ROS | [ | ||
| Fucosterol, 3,6,17-trihydroxy-stigmasta-4,7,24(28)-triene and 14,15,18,20-diepoxyturbinarin (sterols) |
| A seven day-dose regimen at 30 mg/kg/day before carbon tetrachloride (CCl4) administration | Rat model | Antioxidation | n.d. | ↑SOD, CAT, and GPx | [ | |
| Fucosterol | 25, 50, 100, 200, and 400 μM | RAW 264.7 murine macrophages | Protects against oxidative stress | n.d. | ↓ROS generation | [ | ||
| Fucosterol | 25, 50, and 100 μM | tert-Butyl hydroperoxide- and tacrine-induced HepG2cell injury model | Antioxidation | n.d. | ↓ROS generation | [ | ||
| Fucosterol | 3.125, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, and 100 μg /mL | Particulate matter-induced injury and inflammation in A549 human lung epithelial cells | Attenuates oxidative stress | ↓ROS level | [ | |||
| Glycoprotein |
| SOD activity and Xox activity at a concentration of 5 mg/mL and 1 mg/mL, respectively | In vitro enzyme assay | ↑SOD and↓Xox | [ | |||
| Sulfated oligosaccharides | 150 mg/kg·day | Aging model (male senescence-accelerated prone (SAMP8) and male senescence resistant (SAMR1) mice) | Antioxidantion | n.d. | ↑GSH, SOD, CAT, telomerase levels, | [ | ||
| Anti-inflammatory activity | Fucoxanthin | 5, 10, and 50 μM | Aβ42-induced BV2 microglia cells | Anti-inflammation | MAPK pathway | ↓iNOS, COX-2 | [ | |
| Fucoxanthin |
| LPS-activated BV-2 microglia | Anti-inflammation and antioxidation | Akt/NF-κB and MAPKs/AP-1 pathways; | ↓iNOS, COX-2, ↓TNF-α, IL-6, PGE2, NO, ROS | [ | ||
| Fucosterol | 5–20 μM for NO | RAW 264.7 murine macrophages | ↓Inflammatory response | ↓NF-κB pathway | ↓NO production | [ | ||
| Fucosterol |
| 10, 25, or 50 μM | LPS-induced RAW 264.7 macrophages and THP-1 human monocyte cell line | ↓Inflammatory response | ↓NF-κB pathway | ↓iNOS, TNF-α, and IL-6 | [ | |
| Fucosterol |
| 1–10 μM | CoCl2 induced hypoxia in keratinocytes | ↓Inflammatory response | n.d. | ↓IL-6, IL-1β and TNF-α | [ | |
| Fucosterol |
| 0.004,0.2, and 10 μM | LPS or Aβ-induced BV2 (microglial) cells | Protects against LPS or Aβ-mediated neuroinflammation | n.d. | ↓IL-6, IL-1β, TNF-α, NO, and PGE2 | [ | |
| Fucosterol | 3.125, 6.25, 12.5, 25, 50, 100 μg/mL | Particulate matter-induced injury and inflammation in A549 | ↓Inflammatory response | n.d. | ↓COX-2, PGE2, TNF-α and IL-6 | [ | ||
| Dieckol (phlorotannin) |
| 50–300 µg/mL | LPS-stimulated murine BV2 microglia | Anti-inflammation and antioxidation | p-38 MAPK/ NF-κB pathway | ↓NO and PGE2; | [ | |
| Phloroglucinol, eckol, dieckol, 7-phloroeckol, phlorofucofuroeckol A and dioxinodehydroeckol (phlorotannin) | 5–20 μM for NO | LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 murine macrophages | ↓Inflammatory response | ↓NF-κB pathway | ↓NO production | [ | ||
| Phlorofucofuroeckol A |
| 20 μM | LPS-activated BV2 and primary microglial cells | Anti-inflammation | NF-κB, JNKs, p38 MAPK, and Akt pathways | ↓NO and PGE2; | [ | |
| Phlorofucofuroeckol B (phlorotannin) |
| 10–40 µM | LPS-stimulated murine BV2 microglia | Anti-inflammation | IκB-α/NF-κB and Akt/ERK/JNK pathways | ↓TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-6; | [ | |
| 8,8’-bieckol (phlorotannin) |
| LPS-stimulated primary macrophages and RAW 264.7 macrophages | Anti-inflammation; Protects mice from endotoxin shock | NF-κB pathway | ↓NO and PGE2; | [ | ||
| 6,6′-bieckol (phlorotannin) |
| LPS-stimulated BV2 and murine primary microglial cells | Anti-inflammation | IκB-α/NF-κB and JNK/p38 MAPK/Akt pathways | ↓COX-2 and iNOS; | [ | ||
| Fucoidan (sulfated polysaccharide) | Brown seaweed | 25, 50, and 100 µg/mL | LPS-stimulated murine BV2 microglia | Anti-inflammation | NF-κB and JNK/p38 MAPK/Akt pathways | ↓NO and PGE2; | [ | |
| Fucoidan | - | 125 µg/mL | LPS-activated primary microglia | Anti-inflammation | n.d. | ↓TNF-α and ROS | [ | |
| κ-carrageenan oligosaccharides and desulfated derivatives | Red algae | LPS-activated microglia | Anti-inflammation | n.d. | ↓TNF-α | [ | ||
| Sulfated oligosaccharides | 150 mg/kg·day | Aging model (male senescence-accelerated prone (SAMP8) and male senescence resistant (SAMR1) mice) | ↓Inflammatory response | n.d. | ↓IFN-γ, TNF-α, and IL-6 | [ | ||
| Alginate-derived oligosaccharide | Brown algae | 50–500 µg/mL | LPS/Aβ-stimulated BV2 microglia | Anti-inflammation | TLR4/NF-κB signaling pathway | ↓NO and PGE2; | [ | |
| Seleno-polymannuronate | Brown algae | 0.8 mg/mL | LPS-activated primary microglia and astrocytes; | Anti-inflammation | NF-κB and MAPK signaling | ↓NO and PGE2; | [ | |
| Sargachromenol (plastoquinone) |
| 30.2 μM (IC50) | LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 macrophages | Anti-inflammation | NF-κB signaling | ↓NO and PGE2; | [ | |
| Sargaquinoic acid (plastoquinone) |
| LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 macrophages | Anti-inflammation | NF-κB signaling | ↓NO; ↓iNOS; | [ | ||
| Floridoside (glycerol glycosides) | 50 μM | LPS-stimulated murine BV2 microglia | Anti-inflammation | MAPK Signaling | ↓NO, ROS; | [ | ||
| Glycoprotein |
| COX-1 and COX-2 inhibition with IC50 values of 53.03 ± 1.03 μg/mL and 193.35 ± 3.08 μg/mL, respectively | LPS-stimulated RAW 264.7 macrophages | Anti-inflammation | n.d. | ↓COX-1 and COX-2 | [ | |
| Caulerpin (bisindole alkaloid) |
| 100 µM/kg body wt | Capsaicin-induced ear edema and carrageenan-induced peritonitis | Inhibition of nociception | n.d. | n.d. | [ | |
| Caulerpenyne (sesquiterpene) | 5.1 μM | Lipoxygenase (LOX) enzyme activity assay | Inhibitory activity against LOX | - | Un-competitive type of inhibition | [ | ||
| Aquamin (multi-mineral complex) | LPS-stimulated, glial-enriched primary cultures of rat cortex | Anti-inflammation | n.d. | ↓TNF-α and IL-1β | [ | |||
| Anticholinesterase activity | Fucosterol and 24-hydroperoxy 24-vinylcholesterol |
| IC50 values of 421.72 ± 1.43, 176.46 ± 2.51 µM, respectively | In vitro enzymatic assay | ↓BChE activity | - | Selective inhibition of BChE | [ |
| Fucosterol |
| inhibition against AChE (10.99–20.71%) and BChE (4.53–17.53%) with concentrations ≤ 56 μM, | In vitro enzymatic assay | ↓AChE and BChE activities | - | Nonselective cholinesterase inhibition | [ | |
| Fucosterol |
| - | In vitro enzymatic assay | ↓AChE activity | - | Non-competitive inhibition | [ | |
| Fucoxanthin |
| IC50 value 1.97 mM | In vitro BChE activity assay | ↓BChE activity | Mixed inhibition type | [ | ||
| Fucoxanthin | Brown seaweed | IC50 value of 81.2 μM | In vitro AChE activity assay; | ↓AChE activity | Fucoxanthin likely interacts with the peripheral anionic site within AChE | Non-competitive manner | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol |
| IC50 value < 10 μg/mL | In vitro enzymatic assay | ↓AChE and BChE activity | - | - | [ | |
| Glycoprotein |
| AChE and BChE inhibitory activities with IC50 values of 63.56 ± 1.86 and 99.03 ± 4.64, respectively | In vitro enzymatic assay | ↓AChE and BChE activity | - | - | [ | |
| Phloroglucinol, | IC50 value: 76.70 to 579.32 μM | In vitro AChE activity assay | ↓AChE activity | - | - | [ | ||
| Dieckol and phlorofucofuroeckol |
| Ethanol-intoxicated memory impairment in mice | ↓AChE activity | n.d. | ↑Acetylcholine | [ | ||
| Sargaquinoic acid and sargachromenol |
| IC50 value for anti-AChE: 23.2 and 32.7 μM, respectively; | In vitro ChE activity assay | Sargaquinoic acid shows potent inhibitory activity against BuChE and moderate inhibitory activity against AChE | -. | - | [ | |
| (5E,10Z)-6,10,14-trimethylpentadeca-5,10-dien-2,12-dione and (5 |
| IC50 values of 65.0 and 48.0, and 34.0 and 23.0 μM, respectively | In vitro ChE activity assay | Moderate inhibitory activity against AChE and BuChE | - | - | [ | |
| Anti-amyloidogenic and aggregation inhibition activity | Fucoxanthin |
| ↓β-secretase activity; | - | mixed-type inhibition | [ | ||
| Fucoxanthin |
| 0.1–30 μM | Suppresses the formation of Aβ1-42 fibrils and Aβ1–42 oligomers, and inhibits Aβ aggregation | - | - | [ | ||
| Fucoxanthin |
| 2 μM | ThT assay | Inhibits Aβ1-42 fibril and aggregate formation | - | - | [ | |
| Fucosterol |
| 10–100 μM (IC50 value of 64.12 ± 1.0 μM) | In vitro enzyme assay; | ↓β-secretase activity; | - | Noncompetitive inhibition | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol |
| 5 μg/mL | Thioflavin T (ThT), Confocal laser scanning microscopy (CLSM) analysis, Transmission electron microscopy (TEM), Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopic analysis and molecular dynamics simulation | Prevents oligomers formation as well as disaggregates the matured fibrils | - | - | [ | |
| Glycoprotein |
| IC50 values of 73.35 ± 2.54 μg/mL | ↓BACE1 activity | - | - | [ | ||
| Cholesterol homeostasis and Aβ clearance activity | Fucosterol | - | 100 and 200 μM (HEK293 cell cultures); | HEK293 cell cultures (Reporter system); | Reverses cholesterol transport. | n.d. | Dual-LXR agonist (LXR-α and LXR-β) | [ |
| Saringosterol |
| 30 μM | Luciferase reporter | n.d. | n.d. | Selective LXRβ agonist; | [ | |
| Alginate-derived oligosaccharide | Marine brown algae | BV2 microglial cells | Microglial phagocytosis of Aβ | Toll-like receptor signaling | ↑TLR4 | [ | ||
|
| Phlorofucofuroeckol-A and dieckol (phlorotannin) |
| In vitro enzyme assay and functional assay for GPCR screening; Docking analysis | ↓ | - | - | [ | |
| Antiaging | Sulfated oligosaccharides | 150 mg/kg/day | Aging model (male senescence-accelerated prone (SAMP8) and male senescence resistant (SAMR1) mice) | Antioxidant and anti-inflammation | n.d. | ↑GSH, SOD, CAT, telomerase levels, | [ | |
| Fucosterol |
| 50 µg/mL | Culture model of | Extends lifespan | ↑Antioxidant mechanism | n.d. | [ |
n.d.: not defined; -: information not available.
Neurotrophic activity of algal phytochemicals in vitro.
| Compound | Algal Origin (If Any) | Dosage | Experimental Model (In Vivo/In Vitro) | Cellular Effects/Significant Findings | Pharmacological Markers | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sargachromenol | ED50 9 μM (with 10 ng/mL NGF) | PC12D cells | NGF-dependent neurite outgrowth and survival | ↑PKA and MAPK1/2 | [ | |
| Sargaquinoic acid | 3 µg/mL (with 10 ng/mL NGF) | Cell differentiation | Protein Kinase A and MAP Kinases-Mediated Signaling Pathways | [ | ||
| Vitamin B12 | PC12 cells | Cell differentiation | MAPK signal transduction pathway | [ | ||
| Pheophytin A | 3.9 µg/mL | PC12 cells | NGF-independent neurite outgrowth | ↑PKA and MAPK1/2 | [ | |
| Dimethylsulfoniopropionate | - | 7.4 mM | Neuronal N2a and glial OLN-93 cells | Process outgrowth; | ↑α-tubulin acetylation | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 0.1–2 μM | PC-12 cells | NGF-independent neurite outgrowth | n.d. | [ |
n.d.: not defined; -: information not available.
Neuroprotective activity of algal compounds in vitro and in vivo.
| Compound (Class) | Algal Origin (If Any) | Effective Concentration | Experimental Model (In Vivo/In Vitro) | Cellular Effects/Significant Findings | Signaling Pathways Involved | Pharmacological Markers | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||||
| Zonarol | ED50 0.22 µM | HT22 hippocampal neuronal cells (glutamate-induced oxidative stress) | Neuronal survival against oxidative stress | Nrf2/ARE pathway | ↑NQO-1, HO-1, and PRDX4 | [ | |
| Fucoxanthin |
| 0.15–1.5 µmol/L | Hypoxia/reoxygenation-induced neuronal injury | Neuronal survival against oxidative stress | n.d. | n.d. | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 20 μM | Neuronal survival against secondary injury (oxidative stress) | Nrf2-ARE and Nrf2-autophagy pathways | ↓ROS | [ | |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 3 μM | β-Amyloid oligomer-induced neurotoxicity in SH-SY5Y Cells | Neuronal survival against oxidative stress | PI3K/Akt and ERK Pathways | ↓ROS | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 1-3 μM | H2O2-induced toxicity in SH-SY5Y Cells and primary cerebellar granule neurons | Neuronal survival against oxidative stress | PI3K/Akt and ERK Pathways | ↓ROS | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 0.3 μM | Fucoxanthin-modified Aβ1–42 oligomers-induced neurotoxicity in SH-SY5Y Cells | Neuronal survival | n.d. | n.d. | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 5 μM, 10 μM, and 20 μM | Oxygen-glucose deprivation and reoxygenation (OGD/R) model of cultured neurons | Neuronal survival against oxidative stress | Nrf2/HO-1 signaling | ↑Nrf2 nuclear translocation ↑HO-1 | [ |
| Fucoxanthin |
| 0.075 μg/mL | H/R-induced excitotoxicity in primary hippocampal neurons | Neuronal survival against oxidative stress | n.d. | n.d. | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | <2 μM (against Aβ1-42-mediated toxicity) | Aβ1-42-mediated toxicity in PC12 cells | Cell survival | n.d. | n.d. | [ |
| α-Bisabolol |
| 5 μg/mL | Aβ25-35-induced neurotoxicity in PC-12 cells | Antiapoptosis | n.d. | n.d. | [ |
| α-Bisabolol |
| 5 and 10 μg/mL | Aβ25-35-induced neurotoxicity in Neuro2a cells and transgenic | Antioxidation | Aβ mediated pathway | ↓ROS, NOS | [ |
| Fucosterol |
| 1–10 µM at 24 h before sAβ1-42 exposure (effective fucosterol conc. 5–10 µM) | sAβ1-42 (10 µM)-induced ER stress model of primary neurons | Attenuates Aβ1-42-induced neurotoxicity | n.d. | ↑TrkB-mediated ERK1/2 signaling | [ |
| Fucosterol | - | 0.0032 to 20 μM | Aβ-induced cytotoxicity in SH-SY5Y cells | Reduces apoptosis in Aβ-induced SH-SY5Y cells | n.d. | ↑Ngb mRNA | [ |
| Eckol, dieckol and 8,8′-bieckol |
| 1–50 µM | Aβ25-35-stimulated PC12 cells | Antioxidation, anti-inflammation, anti-apoptotic properties | NF-κB pathway | ↓COX-2, iNOS; | [ |
| Phloroglucinol, eckol, triphloroethol A, eckstolonol, and dieckol |
| 50 μM | H2O2-induced oxidative stress in murine hippocampal HT22 cells | ↓Lipid peroxidation; | n.d. | ↓ROS | [ |
| Diphlorethohydroxycarmalol |
| 50 μM | H2O2-induced oxidative stress in murine hippocampal HT22 cells | Antioxidation; | n.d. | ↓Bax | [ |
| Phloroglucinol, dioxinodehydroeckol, eckol, phlorofucofuroeckol A, dieckol, and 7-phloroeckol |
| 2.5, 5, 10 and 20 µg/mL | Aβ peptide-induced toxicity in PC12 cells | Antioxidation | n.d. | ↓ROS | [ |
| Phlorofucofuroeckol | Brown algae | 10 µ | Glutamate-induced cytotoxicity in PC12 | Antioxidation | n.d. | ↓Caspase-3, -8, and PARP | [ |
| Eckmaxol |
| 20 µ | β-amyloid oligomer -induced neuronal apoptosis in SH-SY5Y cells | ↓Apoptosis | GSK-3β and ERK pathways | ↑pGSK-3β | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 0.1–1.0 µ | Aβ1−42-induced neurotoxicity in rat cholinergic basal forebrain neurons | Restores Aβ-induced reduction in whole-cell currents | n.d. | ↑pPKC | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 0.1 and 1.0 mg/mL | MPP(+)-induced injury in MN9D cells | Antioxidation; | n.d. | n.d. | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 60 and 30 μg/mL | H2O2-induced apoptosis in PC12 cells | ↑Cell viability; antioxidation | PI3K/Akt signaling | ↓ROS; | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 100, 200, 400 μg/mL | Aβ25–35 and d-Gal-induced neurotoxicity in PC12 cells | ↓Apoptosis | Caspase-dependent apoptosis pathway | ↓Cytochrome c release; | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 100 μM | MPP(+)-induced injury in dopaminergic precursor cell line(MN9D) cells | ↓Apoptosis; | CatD-Bax signaling axis | ↓LC3-II and CatD; | [ |
| Fucoidan | Fucus vesiculosus Linn., brown alga | 0.5 mg/mL or 1.5 mg/mL | NMDA-induced Ca2+ responses in culture rat neurons | Suppresses the intracellular Ca2+ responses by selectively inhibiting NMDA receptors in cortical neurons and l-type Ca2+ channels in hippocampal neurons. | n.d. | ↓GluNR1 mRNA and | [ |
| Oligo-porphyran | Synthesized from porphyran (isolated from | 200 μg/mL | 6-OHDA-induced cytotoxicity in PC12 cells | ↓Apoptosis; | PI3K/ Akt/PKC pathway | ↓ROS; ↑MMP | [ |
| Acidic oligosaccharide sugar chain | 50, 75, 100 μg/mL | Inflammatory responses and cytotoxicity in SH-SY5Y cell line induced by Aβ-stimulated astrocytes conditioned medium | Oxidative stress | n.d. | ↓TNF-α and IL-6; | [ | |
| Racemosins A (bisindole alkaloid) | 10μM | Aβ25–35-induced SH-SY5Y cell damage | ↑Cell viability; | n.d. | [ | ||
| Tramiprosate | Red marine algae | 50 mg/kg | OGD- or NMDA-induced injury in NGF-differentiated PC12 cells and primary cortical neurons | Protects against neuronal injury | n.d. | [ | |
| Dimethylsulfoniopropionate | - | 1 mg/mL | Tropodithietic acid -induced cytotoxicity in OLN-93 and N2a cells | Protects against neurotoxicity; | n.d. | ↓ERK1/2 activation and HSP32 induction | [ |
| κ-Carrageenan-derived pentasaccharide | marine red algae | 25, 50, or 100 µM | Aβ25-35-induced neurotoxicity in SH-SY5Y cells | ↑Cell viability; ↓Apoptosis | JNK signaling pathway | ↓Cleaved caspase 3 | [ |
|
| |||||||
| Fucoidan | - | 25 mg/kg | MPTP-induced animal model of Parkinsonism in C57/BL mice in vivo | ↓Behavioral deficits; | n.d. | ↑Dopamine, DOPAC and HVA; | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 7.5 and 15 mg/kg body wt (intranigral injection) | LPS-induced neurotoxicity in rat | Ameliorates behavioral deficits, prevents the loss of dopaminergic neurons and inhibits the deleterious activation of microglia in the substantia nigra pars compacta | n.d. | ↓CD11b | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 50, 100, 200 mg kg−1 | Aβ1-40-induced learning and memory impairment in rats | Ameliorates learning and memory impairment; | Antioxidation | ↑ChAT, SOD and GPx activity; | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 100 and 200 mg/kg on day 2–6, 50 mg/kg on day 4–6 | d-Gal-induced cognitive dysfunction in mice | ↓Apoptosis; | Caspase-dependent apoptosis pathway | ↑Ach level and ChAT activity; | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 100–500 ng/mL | Transgenic | Alleviates the paralyzed phenotype; | n.d. | ↑Proteasomal activity (proteolysis); | [ |
| Fucoidan-rich substances |
| Polyphenol/fucoidan extract and mixture (4:6) | Trimethyltin-induced cognitive dysfunction model | Ameliorates learning and memory impairment | n.d. | ↓ROS; ↑MMP; | [ |
| Fucoidan | - | 50 mg/kg | Transient global cerebral ischemia (tGCI) model of gerbils | ↓Oxidative stress and glial activation | n.d. | ↑SOD1 and SOD2 | [ |
| Laminarin | - | 50 or 100 mg/kg (i.p) | Forebrain I/R injury in young gerbils (6 months) | ↓Reactive gliosis (M1 microglia) and neuroinflammation | n.d. | ↓IL-2 | [ |
| Laminarin | Brown algae | 50 mg/kg/day (i.p) | Forebrain I/R injury in aged gerbils (22–24 months) | ↓Oxidative stress and neuroinflammation | n.d. | ↓Superoxide anions and 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE) | [ |
| Oligo-porphyran | Synthesized From porphyran (isolated from | 25 and 50 mg/kg | 6-OHDA-induced Parkinsonian mice model | ↓Apoptosis; | PI3K/Akt/Bcl-2 pathway | ↑DAT and TH; | [ |
| Porphyran | Degraded polysaccharide from | 75, 150, 300 mg/kg | Aβ1-40-induced mice AD model | Improved learning and memory deficits | n.d. | ↑ChAT activity; | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | Brown seaweed | 50, 100, 200 mg/kg | Scopolamine-induced cognitive impairments in mice | Memory enhancement; | n.d. | ↓AChE and choline acetyltransferase | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 0.1−30 μM | Aβ oligomer-induced cognitive impairments in mice | Memory enhancement, | n.d. | ↑BDNF | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | - | 5 μM, 10 μM, and 20 μM | Middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) rat model (cerebral ischemic/reperfusion (I/R) injury) | Improves the neurologic deficit score and reduces the infarct volume | n.d. | ↑SOD activity | [ |
| Fucoxanthin | 100 mg/kg and 0.05 mmol/L | Traumatic brain injury (TBI) model | Anti-apoptosis, | Nrf2-ARE and Nrf2-autophagy pathways | ↑GPx | [ | |
| Fucosterol |
| 1–10 µM | sAβ1-42-induced memory dysfunction in aging rats | Ameliorates Aβ1-42-induced memory impairment | n.d. | ↑TrkB-mediated ERK1/2 signaling | [ |
| Dieckol and phlorofucofuroeckol |
| PFF (0.2 and 2 mg/kg) | Ethanol-intoxicated memory-impaired mice | ↓AChE activity; | n.d. | ↑ACh | [ |
| C-Phycocyanin | 200 mg/kg | Global cerebral ischemia/reperfusion (I/R) injury in gerbils | Reduces the infarct volume and improves the neurologic deficit score; | n.d. | ↓MDA | [ | |
| Tramiprosate | Red marine algae | 50 mg/kg | Intraluminal filament model of MCAO | Reduces infarct volume | PSD95/nNOS signaling | Disruption of the interaction between PSD95 and nNOS; | [ |
| Sulfated agaran | 60 μg, single intrastriatal injection | Rat 6-hydroxydopamine Parkinson’s disease model | ↓Oxidative/ | n.d. | ↑DA, DOPAC and HVA; | [ | |
n.d.: not defined; -: information not available.
Figure 5A scheme highlighting the pathophysiology of neurodegenerative disorders and post-ischemic consequences along with indicating the underlying mechanism of neuroprotective action of algal compounds. The numeric symbols indicate the points of pharmacological action that include (1) inhibition of cytokine secretion from activated microglia by fucoxanthin, fucosterol, fucoidan, dieckol, phlorofucofuroeckol and bieckol, κ-carrageenan, floridoside and seleno-polymannarate, (2) attenuation of inflammatory response via inhibition of NF-κB pathway by eckol, dieckol and 8,8-bieckol, (3) priming of antioxidant defense system via activation of Nrf2/ARE pathway (blocking interaction between Nrf2 and Keap1) by fucoxanthin, fucoidan and zonarol, (4) Reduction of apoptosis via inhibiting pro-apoptotic JNK/Erk pathway by dimethylsulfoniopropionate and κ-carrageenan-derived pentasaccharide, (5) Inhibition of glutamate-induced Ca2+ influx via blocking extrasynaptic GluN2B by fucoidan and tramiprosate, (6) Activation of BDNF-dependent pro-survival pathway via inducing PI3K/Akt or TrkB/ERK signaling by fucoxanthin and fucosterol, (7) Attenuation of I/R-injury via preventing excitotoxic depolarization by C-phycocyanin, (8) Inhibition of nNOS sequestration by tramiprosate, (9) proteasomal degradation by fucoidan, (10) Induction of autophagy/mitophagy by fucoxanthin, (11) anticholinesterase activity by fucoidan, fucoxanthin, dieckol and phlorofucofuroeckol, (12) anti-amyloidogenesis via blocking β-secretase activity by fucoxanthin, fucosterol and glycoprotein, and (13) Aβ-clearance via enhancing the transcription of ApoE and ABC transporters genes by fucosterol, saringasterol, and alginate-derived oligosaccharide. NF-κB/p50-pp65, nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; Nrf2, nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2; ARE, antioxidant response element; IkB, inhibitor of NF-κB; Keap1, Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinases; GluN2B, N-methyl D-aspartate receptor subtype 2B; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinases; Akt, protein kinase B; MEK1/2, mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinases; TrkB, tropomyosin receptor kinase B; CREB, cAMP-response element binding protein; CRE, cAMP response elements; BDNF, Brain-derived neurotrophic factor; AChE, acetylcholinesterase; Ach, acetylcholine; ABCA1, ATP-binding cassette transporter A1; nNOS, neuronal nitric oxide synthase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; ψ, mitochondrial membrane potential.