| Literature DB >> 33923487 |
Elizabeth Goya-Jorge1,2, María Elisa Jorge Rodríguez3, Maité Sylla-Iyarreta Veitía4, Rosa M Giner1.
Abstract
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a transcription factor deeply implicated in health and diseases. Historically identified as a sensor of xenobiotics and mainly toxic substances, AhR has recently become an emerging pharmacological target in cancer, immunology, inflammatory conditions, and aging. Multiple AhR ligands are recognized, with plant occurring flavonoids being the largest group of natural ligands of AhR in the human diet. The biological implications of the modulatory effects of flavonoids on AhR could be highlighted from a toxicological and environmental concern and for the possible pharmacological applicability. Overall, the possible AhR-mediated harmful and/or beneficial effects of flavonoids need to be further investigated, since in many cases they are contradictory. Similar to other AhR modulators, flavonoids commonly exhibit tissue, organ, and species-specific activities on AhR. Such cellular-context dependency could be probably beneficial in their pharmacotherapeutic use. Flavones, flavonols, flavanones, and isoflavones are the main subclasses of flavonoids reported as AhR modulators. Some of the structural features of these groups of flavonoids that could be influencing their AhR effects are herein summarized. However, limited generalizations, as well as few outright structure-activity relationships can be suggested on the AhR agonism and/or antagonism caused by flavonoids.Entities:
Keywords: Ah receptor; bioactive; dioxin receptor; flavonoids; functional food; phytochemicals; phytocompounds; polyphenols; transcription factor; xenobiotics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33923487 PMCID: PMC8073824 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26082315
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Schematic domain organization of the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) and its binding sites.
Figure 2Schematic representation of AhR-mediated pathways. Ligands bind to the cytoplasmic AhR, where it forms a complex with HSP90, p23, XAP2, and SRC. (I) Agonist ligands promote conformational changes and the exposure of NLS, allowing the nuclear translocation mediated by importin β through the NPC. (II) Once in the nucleus, the heterodimer AhR-ARNT can bind to different sequences in the DNA and trigger the synthesis of proteins (e.g., CYP1A1, UGT1A6), which is additionally regulated by coactivators. (III) Crosstalk interactions with other signaling pathways are acknowledged (e.g., ESRs, AR). Moreover, the Ah receptor can be repressed by AhRR, and its degradation is mainly mediated by 26S proteasome.
Figure 3Examples of AhR endogenous and exogenous modulators (structures, common names, and CAS numbers are shown).
Figure 4General classes of flavonoids and some relevant subclassifications.
Plant occurring flavonoids studied as aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) modulators through different bioassays.
| Flavonoids | Bioassays | Cell lines & Tissues | [μM] | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RT-qPCR, PCR, LucRGA, | Caco2, YAMC, | 10–100 | [ | |
| RT-qPCR, | LNCaP, CWR22Rv1, | 10–100 | [ | |
| RT-qPCR, ChIP, WB, LucRGA | Caco2, HepG2 | 0.1–100 | [ | |
| LucRGA | H1L6.1c2 | 25 | [ | |
| LucRGA, | HepG2, MCF-7, | 0.1–100 | [ | |
| WB, LucRGA | 3T3-L1 (AhR), | 30–100 | [ | |
| qPCR, WB | THP-1 | 3.0–30 | [ | |
| RT-qPCR, LucRGA, WB | Caco2, YAMC, | 0.1–1000 | [ |
Bioassays: Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), Co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP), EROD, ethoxyresorufin-O-deethylase (EROD), Immunofluorescence (IF), Immunohistochemical (IHC), Luciferase reporter gene assay (LucRGA), reverse transcriptase-quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RT-qPCR), western blotting (WB). Cell Lines: draining lymph node (DLN), human breast adenocarcinoma (MCF-7), human colon cancer (HCT116), human epithelial colorectal adenocarcinoma (Caco2), human hepatocyte (HC-04), human hepatoma (HepG2), human monocytic leukemia (THP-1), human prostate carcinoma (LNCaP, CWR22Rv1), mouse adipocytes (3T3-L1), mouse colonic epithelium (YAMC), mouse hepatoma (H1L6.1c2, Hepa-1c1c7), mouse lymphoblast (EL-4), porcine brain microvascular endothelium (PBMEC/C1-2).
Structures and AhR activity reported for the flavone class of compounds.
| Flavones | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Flavone | Chrysin | Apigenin | Luteolin |
| Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ |
| Tricetin | Scutellarein | Acacetin | Genkwanin |
| Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Non-agonist [ |
| 4′,7-Dimethoxy-5-hydroxyflavone | 4′,5,7-Trimethoxyflavone | 3′,4′,5,7-tetramethoxyflavone | Tangeretin |
| Agonist [ | Non-agonist [ | Agonist [ | Antagonist [ |
| Baicalin | Luteolin 7,3′-diglucoside | ||
| Agonist [ | Antagonist [ | ||
Structures and AhR activity reported for the flavonol class of compounds.
| Flavonols | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Flavonol | Galangin | Kaempferol | Fisetin |
| Agonist [ | Antagonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ |
| 3,6,2′,3′-Tetrahydroxyflavone | 3,6,2′,4′-Tetrahydroxyflavone | Morin | Quercetin |
| Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ |
| Robinetin | Gossypetin | Myricetin | Isorhamnetin |
| Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Antagonist [ |
| Tamarixetin | Icaritin | Guaijaverin | Quercitrin |
| Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Antagonist [ |
| Rutin | |||
Structures and AhR activity reported for the flavanone class of compounds.
| Flavanones | ||
|---|---|---|
| Flavanone | Naringenin | Eriodictyol |
| Antagonist [ | Antagonist [ | Antagonist [ |
| Alpinetin | Sakuranetin | Hesperetin |
| Agonist [ | Non-agonist [ | Agonist [ |
| Naringenin Trimethyl Ether | Hesperidin | Naringin |
| Non-agonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ |
| 6-Prenylnaringenin | 8-Prenylnaringenin | Isoxanthohumol |
| Agonist [ | Agonist [ | Non-agonist [ |
Structures and AhR activity reported for the isoflavone class of compounds.
| Isoflavones | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Daidzein | Genistein | Formononetin | Biochanin A |
| Antagonist [ | Antagonist [ | Agonist [ | Agonist [ |
| Prunetin | 4′,7-dimethoxy-5-hydroxyisoflavone | 4′,5,7-trimethoxyisoflavone | 3′,4′,5,7-tetramethoxyisoflavone |
| Non-agonist [ | Non-agonist [ | Agonist [ | Non-agonist [ |
|
| Puerarin | ||
| Non-antagonist [ | |||