| Literature DB >> 33171952 |
Yeju Liu1, Yuyang You2, Juan Lu1, Xi Chen1, Zhihong Yang1.
Abstract
Pterostilbene is a natural 3,5-dimethoxy analog of resveratrol. This stilbene compound has a strong bioactivity and exists widely in Dalbergia and Vaccinium spp. Besides natural extraction, pterostilbene can be obtained by biosynthesis. Pterostilbene has become popular because of its remarkable pharmacological activities, such as anti-tumor, anti-oxidation, anti-inflammation, and neuroprotection. Pterostilbene can be rapidly absorbed and is widely distributed in tissues, but it does not seriously accumulate in the body. Pterostilbene can easily pass through the blood-brain barrier because of its low molecular weight and good liposolubility. In this review, the studies performed in the last three years on resources, synthesis, bioactivity, and pharmacokinetics of pterostilbene are summarized. This review focuses on the effects of pterostilbene on certain diseases to explore its targets, explain the possible mechanism, and look for potential therapeutic applications.Entities:
Keywords: bioactivity; pharmacokinetics; pterostilbene; research progress; synthesis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33171952 PMCID: PMC7664215 DOI: 10.3390/molecules25215166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Chemical structure of pterostilbene.
Scheme 1The first chemical synthesis method of pterostilbene [23].
Scheme 2The second chemical synthesis method of pterostilbene [24].
Scheme 3The third chemical synthesis method of pterostilbene [25].
Scheme 4The fourth chemical synthesis method of pterostilbene [26].
Scheme 5The fifth chemical synthesis method of pterostilbene [27].
Pharmacokinetics profiles of pterostilbene.
| Subject | Mode of | Dose | AUC (mg h/L) | V (L/kg) | CL (mL/min/kg) | T1/2 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| C57 BL/6 mice | iv. | 10 | 26.7 ± 8.2 | Vc 0.674 ± 0.12 | (0.014 ± 0.003) × 103 | 34.5 ± 1.0 | [ |
| C57 BL/6 mice | ig. | 14 | 4.43 ± 2.0 | Vc 4.9 ± 1.9 | (0.027 ± 0.008) × 103 | 102± 19.2 | [ |
| C57 BL/6 mice | ig. | 28 | 11.9 ± 2.1 | Vc 3.76 ± 0.85 | (0.012 ± 0.008) × 103 | 87.8 ± 29.2 | [ |
| C57 BL/6 mice | ig. | 56 | 39.4 ± 9.7 | Vc 1.57 ± 0.27 | (0.030 ± 0.005) × 103 | 56.9 ± 13.9 | [ |
| SD rat | iv. | 2.5 | (35.6 ± 5.1)/60 | Vc 2.85 ± 0.50 | 68.2 ± 9.8 | 93.9 ± 22.3 | [ |
| SD rat | iv. | 5 | (135,650 ± 8944)/(60 × 103) | Vc (1267 ± 364)/103 | 37.0 ± 2.5 | 96.6 ± 23.7 | [ |
| SD rat | iv. | 10 | (168.7 ± 28.6)60 | Vc 3.03 ± 0.88 | 59.1 ± 8.8 | 155.1 ± 64.1 | [ |
| SD rat | iv. | 11.2 | 4009/103 | Vss 5.30 | 2.7 × 103/60 | 2.9 × 60 | [ |
| SD rat | iv. | 20 | 17.5 ± 6.6 | Vd 2.41 ± 1.13 | (0.960 ± 0.025) | (1.73 ± 0.87) × 60 | [ |
| SD rat | iv. | 25 | (689.2 ± 124.1)/60 | Vc 2.19 ± 0.17 | 36.4 ± 7.8 | 150.8 ± 15.9 | [ |
| Wistar rat | iv. | 22.5 | (38.8 ± 5.3) × 256.3/103 | Vss 6.1 ± 1.0 | (2.3 ± 0.3) × 103/60 | (1.8 ± 0.3) × 60 | [ |
CL, clearance; iv., intravenous; ig., intragastric; T1/2, half-life; Vd, volume of distribution; Vss, apparent distribution volume at steady concentration; Vc, apparent distribution volume of central compartment.
Figure 2Bioactivities and possible mechanisms of pterostilbene. The anti-tumor mechanism of pterostilbene is related to several tumor characteristics, including anti-proliferation (AKT/mTOR, ERK1/2 and JAK/STAT3 pathway), the induction of apoptosis (AKT/mTOR/p70S6K and ERS pathway), the inhibition of invasion and metastasis (Src/Fak and Rac1/WAVE/Arp2/3 pathway), and the inhibition of tumor stem cells (GRP78 pathway). AKT, active human protein kinase; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; ERK1/2, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; JAK/STAT3, Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription; p70S6K, downstream of mTOR; ERS, endoplasmic reticulum stress; Src/Fak, steroid receptor coactivator/focal adhesion kinase; Rac1, Rac family small GTPase 1; WAVE, WASP-family verprolin-homologous protein; Arp2/3, actin-related protein 2/3; GRP78, glucose-regulated protein; SOD, superoxide dismutase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TNF-α, tumor necrosis factor-α; IL-1β, interleukin-1β; IFN-γ, interferon-γ; IL-6, interleukin-6; MMP2, matrix metalloprotein-2; MMP9, matrix metalloprotein-9.
Signaling pathway of the anti-tumor effect of pterostilbene.
| Signaling Pathway | Model | Dose | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| EGFR, Akt/mTOR, Stat3, ERK1/2, and NFκB pathways | urethane-caused lung tumor | 250 mg/kg | [ |
| microRNA 448 circuit | MDA-MB-231 cells were cocultured with M2 TAM and were subcutaneously injected into the left flank of NOD/SCID mice | 5 mg/kg | [ |
| JAK/STAT3 signaling pathway | Breast cancer cell lines (MDA-231 and ZR-751) | 75 μM | [ |
| Src/Fak signaling pathway | MDA-MB-231-bearing NOD/SCID mice | 10 mg/kg | [ |
| Rac1/WAVE/Arp2/3 pathway | MDA-MB-231 cells | 10 μM | [ |
| β-catenin/p65 | F344 rats were given two AOM injections subcutaneously | 0.004% in the diet for 45 weeks | [ |
| ATM/CHK/p53 pathway | non-small cell lung cancer cell (A549) | 21 μM | [ |
| GRP78 signaling pathway | human glioblastoma cell lines GBM8401 and U87MG | 2.99, 1.42 μM | [ |
| p53/SOD2/ROS pathway | HepG2 cells | 100 μM | [ |
| miR-663b/BCL2L14 signaling pathway | HTB-111 and Ishikawa cells | 71.64 nM, 74.34 µM | [ |
| JAK2/STAT3 signaling pathway | human osteosarcoma cell line, SOSP-9607 | 1.81 µM | [ |
| AKT/mTOR/p70S6K and ERK1/2 pathways | T24 human bladder cancer cell | 66.58 ± 1.84 µM | [ |
| Fas/FasL pathway | human AGS gastric carcinoma cells (CCRC 60102) | 50.7 μM | [ |
| ERS signaling pathway | Human EC109 and TE1 esophageal cancer cells | 150 μM | [ |
| RAGE/PI3K/Akt signaling pathway | MIA PaCa-2 and MIA PaCa-2GEMR cells (GEM-resistant cells) | 41.8, 42.0 µM | [ |
| signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 signaling pathway | HeLa, CaSki, and SiHa cervical cancer adherent cells | 32.67, 14.83, 34.17 µM | [ |
Model and dose of antioxidation activity of pterostilbene.
| Model | Dose | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Human keratinocytes, mouse epidermal cells | 3.75, 7.5, 15 μM | [ |
| human retinal endothelial cells | 1.0 mM | [ |
| Streptozotocin–nicotinamide-induced type 2 diabetes mellitus in Wistar rats | 40 mg/kg for 6 weeks | [ |
Model and dose of lipid-lowering activity of pterostilbene.
| Model | Dose | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| H4IIEC3 cells | 100 µM | [ |
| Obese Otsuka Long–Evans Tokushima fatty rats | 0.5% diet for 4 weeks | [ |
| 3T3-L1 mature adipocytes | 5 µM | [ |
| Mice fed an obesogenic high-fat diet | 352 µmol/kg/d for 30 weeks | [ |
| Genetic obesity Zucker ( | 15, 30 mg/kg body weight/day for 6 weeks | [ |
| Wistar rats fed an obesogenic diet | 15, 30 mg/kg body weight/day for 6 weeks | [ |
| 3T3-F442A preadipocytes | 1–10 μM | [ |
| 3T3-L1 preadipocytes | 5–40 μM | [ |
| Genetic obesity Zucker ( | 15 mg/kg body weight/day for 6 weeks | [ |
Model and dose of hypoglycemic activity of pterostilbene.
| Model | Dose | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Streptozotocin-nicotinamide-induced diabetic male albino Wistar rats | 10, 20, 40 mg/kg for 2, 4, 6 weeks | [ |
| Islet β cells of INS-1E rats induced by streptozotocin | 4, 8 μM | [ |
| Moderate diabetic mice with glycosuria and hyperglycemia | 5 mg/kg for 5 weeks | [ |
| Insulin resistance associated Wistar rats with obesity feeding | 15 mg/kg body weight/d for 6 weeks | [ |
| Diabetes was induced in rats by streptozotocin and a high-sugar and high-fat diet | 20, 40 and 80 mg/kg/d for 8 weeks | [ |
Model and dose of antifungal, antiviral and antipsychotic activity of pterostilbene.
| Model | Dose | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Conidia of | 60 μg/mL | [ |
|
| 0.02 mg/mL | [ |
| HIV-1 infection in resting CD4 T cells | 5 μM | [ |
| Transformed fibroblast cell line | 10 μM | [ |
| Elevated plus maze test mice | 2 mg/kg | [ |
| Chronic unexpected stressed model rats | 2.5 mg/L | [ |
Comparison between pterostilbene and resveratrol.
| In Vivo or In Vitro | Model | Comparison | Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In vitro | Multidrug resistant HL60-R (human myeloid cell line expressing P-glycoprotein) | AC50 of pterostilbene is 85 ± 11, resveratrol has almost no effect on inducing apoptosis | Caspase-independent pathway | [ |
| In vitro | HT-29 human adenocarcinoma cell line | Pterostilbene (IC50, 22.4 μmol/L), resveratrol (IC50, 43.8 μmol/L) | P38 mitogen-activated protein kinase cascade | [ |
| In vivo | Mouse susceptibility No. 8 (SAMP8) AD model | Pterostilbene was a more effective cognitive and cellular stress regulator than resveratrol | The increasing of the expression of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor α | [ |
| In vivo | Wistar rats fed an obesogenic diet | Pterostilbene is more effective than resveratrol at a dose of 15 mg/kg/d | The decrease of lipogenesis in adipose tissue and the increase of fatty acid oxidation in liver | [ |
| In vivo | Wistar rats fed an obesogenic diet | 15 mg/kg body weight/d was not as effective as pterostilbene in reducing serum glucose levels | The increase of liver glucokinase activity and skeletal muscle glucose uptake | [ |
| In vitro |
| The minimum inhibitory concentration was more than 60 times lower than that of resveratrol | Inducing the leakage of cell contents, which resulted in the loss of bacterial cell vitality | [ |