| Literature DB >> 34885907 |
Nkwachukwu Oziamara Okoro1,2,3, Arome Solomon Odiba1,2, Patience Ogoamaka Osadebe3, Edwin Ogechukwu Omeje3, Guiyan Liao4, Wenxia Fang2,4, Cheng Jin1,2,5, Bin Wang1,2.
Abstract
In the forms of either herbs or functional foods, plants and their products have attracted medicinal, culinary, and nutraceutical applications due to their abundance in bioactive phytochemicals. Human beings and other animals have employed those bioactive phytochemicals to improve health quality based on their broad potentials as antioxidant, anti-microbial, anti-carcinogenic, anti-inflammatory, neuroprotective, and anti-aging effects, amongst others. For the past decade and half, efforts to discover bioactive phytochemicals both in pure and crude forms have been intensified using the Caenorhabditis elegans aging model, in which various metabolic pathways in humans are highly conserved. In this review, we summarized the aging and longevity pathways that are common to C. elegans and humans and collated some of the bioactive phytochemicals with health benefits and lifespan extending effects that have been studied in C. elegans. This simple animal model is not only a perfect system for discovering bioactive compounds but is also a research shortcut for elucidating the amelioration mechanisms of aging risk factors and associated diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Caenorhabditis elegans; aging; bioactive compounds; lifespan; longevity pathways
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34885907 PMCID: PMC8658929 DOI: 10.3390/molecules26237323
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1The known signaling pathways and key factors linked to aging process.
Polyphenolic compounds with anti-aging and lifespan extending properties as demonstrated in the C. elegans model.
| Polyphenolic Compounds | Mean Lifespan Extension * | Plant Source # | Ethnobotanical Use | Implicated * Genes | Pathway * | Anti-Aging Effect * | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flavonoids | |||||||
| Tambulin | 16% at 50 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-Parkinson’s | [ | ||
| Rosmarinic acid | 40% at 60 µM | Medicinal, | IIS and | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Curcumin | 39% at 20 µΜ | Medicinal, | IIS, MAPK and JNK | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Chlorogenic acid | 20% at 50 µM | Medicinal, | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) | 10%–14% at 220 µΜ | Medicinal, |
| IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| 20% at 100 μM | IIS | [ | |||||
| Myricetin | 32% at 100 µM | Medicinal, |
| IIS | Anti-oxidative | [ | |
| 18% at 100 µM | IIS | [ | |||||
| Quercetin | 15% at 100 µM | Functional food, |
| IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| 5% at 100 µM |
| IIS | [ | ||||
| 11% at 100 µM | IIS, | [ | |||||
| Kaempferol | 5% at 100 µM | Beverage, |
| IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| 10% at 100 µM |
| IIS | [ | ||||
| Fisetin | 6% at 100 µM | Functional foods |
| IIS | Anti-oxidative | [ | |
| Catechin | 8% at 200 µM | Medicinal, | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Epicatechin (EC) | 15% at 100 µM | Functional foods, | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| 47% at 200 µM | IIS | [ | |||||
| 3′-O-methylepicatechin | 6% at 200 µM | Functional foods, | - | - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| 4′-O-methylepicatechin | 12% at 200 µM | - | - | [ | |||
| Baicalein | 45% at 100 µM | Medicinal |
| IIS | Anti-oxidative | [ | |
| 36% at 0.1% |
| - | [ | ||||
| Caffeic acid | 11% at 300 µM | Beverage, | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |||
| Acacetin | 27% at 25 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Acacetin 7-O-α-l-rhamnopyranosyl(1–2)β-D-xylopyranoside | 39% at 25 µM | Medicinal | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |||
| Quercetin-3-O-dirhamnoside | 21% at 200 µM | Culinary, | - | - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| Quercetin-3-O-glucoside | 23% at 25 µM | Medicinal | - | - | Anti-oxidative | [ | |
| Isorhamnetin (Quercetin 3′-O-methylether) | 16% at 200 μM | Medicinal, | - | - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| Tamarixetin | 11% at 200 μM | Medicinal | - | - | Stress resistance, | [ | |
| Icariin | 20% at 45 μM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Icariside II | 20% at 20 μM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Isoxanthohumol | 2% at 100 μM | Medicinal |
| IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| Silymarin | 10% at 25 µM | Medicinal |
| - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| Genistein | 27% at 100 µM | Medicinal, | Healthspan extension, | [ | |||
| Taxifolin | 51% at 820 µM | Medicinal, | - | - | Stress Resistance, | [ | |
| Trolox | 31% at 0.6 mM–3 mM | Functional food | - | - | Anti-oxidative | [ | |
| Chicoric Acid | 20% at 100µM | Medicinal, | - | AMPK | Anti-oxidative | [ | |
| Naringin | 23% at 50 µM | Functional food | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
|
| |||||||
| Tannic acid | 18% at 100 μM | Functional food |
| MAPK | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| 24% at 0.01% |
| IIS | [ | ||||
| Pentagalloyl Glucose | 18% at 160 μM | IIS, DR, SIR-2.1 and METC. | Anti-oxidative | [ | |||
|
| |||||||
| Resveratrol | Variable effects at 100 μM | Functional food |
| - | Anti-oxidative | [ | |
| 3% at 5 μM | - | - | [ | ||||
| 11% at 100 µg/mL | - | [ | |||||
| OxyResveratrol | 31% at 1000 µM | Functional food, | AMPK and SIR-2.1 | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| TSG (2,3,5,4′-Tetrahydroxystilbene-2-O-β-D-glucoside) | 23% at 100 μM | Medicinal | - | - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |
| Polydatin | 30% at 1 mM | Functional food | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Piceatannol | 18% at 50 and 100 µM | Functional food | IIS | Anti-oxidative | [ | ||
|
| |||||||
| 45% at 50 µM | Functional food | - | - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| 36% at 50 µM | Functional food | - | - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| 36% at 50 µM | Functional food | - | - | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| 19% at 50 µM | Functional food | - |
| Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
|
| |||||||
| Sesamin | 13% at 6.3 µg/plate | Functional Food | IIS | Anti-oxidative | [ | ||
| Vitexin | 17% at 100 mM | Functional Food | IIS | Anti-oxidative | [ | ||
| Arctigenin | 13% at 100 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Matairesinol | 25% at 100 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Arctiin | 15% at 100 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Lappaol C | 11% at 100 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Lappaol F | 12% at 100 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| (Iso) lappaol A | 11% at 100 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
|
| |||||||
| Tryosol | 21% at 250 μM | Medicinal, | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| 6-Gingerol | 20% at 25 µM | Culinary, | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |||
| 6-Shogaol | 19% at 12.5 µM | Culinary, | Anti-oxidative, | [ | |||
| Salicyclic Acid | 14% at 1 mM | Medicinal, | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Salicylamine | 32% at 100 µM | Culinary | - | Healthspan extension | [ | ||
| Juglone | 29% at 40 µM | Functional Food, | IIS | Anti-oxidative, | [ | ||
| Gallic Acid | 25% at 300 μM | Functional food | - | - | Stress resistance | [ | |
| Ferulic Acid | 9.58% at 500 µM | Functional food | IIS | Healthspan extension, | [ | ||
* Mean lifespan and implicated genes, pathways, and anti-aging effects in the table are the specific outcomes from the references indexed directly against the compound at the right-end column. A dash (-) sign in the column for implicated genes and pathways represents where the authors did not proceed to investigate the molecular mechanism beyond the effect observed. Where different mean lifespans are not from the same study, we have referenced the appropriate literature for such. Original units of concentration used by the investigators are reported here. Additionally, where other health benefits besides the anti-aging effect have been noted for the compound in the primary research referenced, we grouped them under the heading “Others” in the column for “Anti-aging-effect”. # Plant sources of the compound in the study indexed to the reference directly at the right-end column are listed. Other sources that have been mentioned by the primary study, and previous studies have also been listed as well. Scientific names and common names (in parenthesis) of the plant sources are provided. ^ Compounds not directly obtained from the plant sources indicated but that are produced by gut microflora from foods rich in ellagitannins such as the plants listed.
Terpenoids with anti-aging and lifespan extending properties as demonstrated in the C. elegans model.
| Terpenoids | Mean Lifespan Extension * | Plant Source # | Ethnobotanical Use | Implicated * Genes | Pathway * | Anti-Aging Effect * | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carnosic Acid | 3% at 60 µM | Food, | MAPK and HSF-1 | Anti-oxidant, | [ | ||
| Carnosol | 19% at 180 µM | Medicinal, | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| Beta-Caryophyllene | >22% at 50 μM | Culinary, | IIS | Anti-oxidant, | [ | ||
| 4-Hydroxy-E-globularinin | 18% at 20 μM | Medicinal | IIS | Anti-oxidant | [ | ||
| 10- | 17% at 20 μM | Medicinal |
| IIS | Anti-oxidant, | [ | |
| Oleanolic acid | 16% at 300 μM | Constituent of the leaves | Food, | IIS | Anti-oxidant, | [ | |
| α-Tocopherol | 7% at 50 µg/mL | Sunflower seeds (Helianthus annuus), | Functional food | - | - | Anti-oxidant | [ |
| Withanolide-A | 29% at 5 μM | Medicinal | IIS | Neuroprotective, | [ | ||
| Specioside | 15% at 25 μM | Medicinal | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| Ursolic acid | 32% at 25 μM | Medicinal, | JNK-1 | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 18α-Glycyrrhetinic acid | 17% at 20 μg/mL | Medicinal, | p38 MAPK | Neuroprotective | [ | ||
| Glaucarubinone | 1.9 days at 100 nM | Ornamental, | - | - | Anti-oxidant | [ | |
| Fucoxanthin | 14% at 5 μM | Medicinal | - | - | Antioxidant, | [ | |
| Catalpol | 28% at 25 μM | Medicinal plant | IIS | Anti-oxidant, | [ | ||
| Ferulsinaic acid | 20% at 100 µM | Medicinal, | - | - | Anti-oxidant | [ | |
| Verminoside | 20% at 25 µM | Medicinal |
| - | Antioxidant, | [ | |
| Dehydroabietic acid | 15% at 10 µM | Medicinal |
| - | Healthspan extension | [ | |
| Secoisolariciresinol Diglucoside | 22% at 500 µM | Food, Medicine | IIS | Anti-oxidant, | [ |
* Mean lifespan and implicated genes, pathways, and anti-aging effects in the table are the specific outcomes from the references indexed directly against the compound at the right-end column. A dash (-) sign in the column for implicated genes and pathways represents where authors did not proceed to investigate the molecular mechanism beyond the effect observed. Where different mean lifespans are not from the same study, we have referenced the appropriate literature for such. Original units of concentration used by the investigators are reported here. Additionally, where other health benefits besides the anti-aging effect have been noted for the compound in the primary research referenced, we grouped them under the heading “Others” in the column for “Anti-aging-effect”. # Plant sources of the compound in the study indexed to the reference directly at the right-end column are listed. Other sources that have been mentioned by the primary study and previous studies have also been listed as well. Scientific names and common names (in parenthesis) of the plant sources are provided.
Alkaloids with anti-aging and lifespan extending properties as demonstrated in the C. elegans model.
| Alkaloids | Mean Lifespan Extension * | Plant Source # | Ethnobotanical Use | Implicated * Genes | Pathway * | Anti-Aging Effect * | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Reserpine | 31% at 30 μM | Medicinal | Serotonin pathway | Anti-oxidant, | [ | ||
| Tomatidine | 7% at 25 μM | Medicinal, |
| IIS | Anti-inflammatory, Anti- tumorigenic, Lipid-lowering activities | [ | |
| Spermidine | 18% at 0.2 mM | Functional food | - | - | Enhanced autophagy | [ | |
| 15% at 0.2 mM | - | - | [ | ||||
| Caffeine | 29% at 0.1% | Beverages, |
| IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | |
| 16% at 10 mM |
| IIS | [ | ||||
| 80% at 5 mM |
| IIS | [ | ||||
| 31.9% at 5 mM | IIS | [ | |||||
| Theophylline | 25% at 5 mM | Beverages, | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| Chlorophyll | 23% at 10 µg/mL 25% at 40 µg/mL | Food, | IIS | Antioxidant | [ | ||
| Pyrroloquinoline quinone | 33% at 0.5 mM | Functional food, | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| Calycosin | 21% at 200 µM | Medicinal | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ |
* Mean lifespan and implicated genes, pathways, and anti-aging effects in the table are the specific outcomes from the references indexed directly against the compound at the right-end column. A dash (-) sign in the column for implicated genes and pathways represents where authors did not proceed to investigate the molecular mechanism beyond the effect observed. Where different mean lifespans are not from the same study, we have referenced the appropriate literature for such. Original units of concentration used by the investigators are reported here. Additionally, where other health benefits besides the anti-aging effect have been noted for the compound in the primary research referenced, we grouped them under the heading “Others” in the column for “Anti-aging-effect”. # Plant sources of the compound in the study indexed to the reference directly at the right-end column are listed. Other sources that have been mentioned by the primary study and previous studies have also been listed as well. Scientific names and common names (in parenthesis) of the plant sources are provided.
Plant crude extracts with anti-aging and lifespan-extending properties as demonstrated in the C. elegans model.
| Plant Source # | Mean Lifespan Extension * | Ethnobotanical Use | Implicated Genes * | Pathway * | Anti-Aging Effect * | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 33% at 300 µg/mL | Medicinal | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 16% at 300 µg/mL | Medicinal |
| IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | |
| 4% at 50 µg/mL | Food vegetable | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| Significant increase at 500 µg/mL | Food, | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 20% by 50 μg/mL | Medicinal, | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 10% at 100 µg/mL | Medicinal, | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 24% at 1 mg/mL | Medicinal, | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 16% at 0.01 µg/mL | Medicinal | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 35.99 % at 50 | Medicinal | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 10.5%, 18.0%, and 26.2% at 100, 200, and 400 mg/mL, respectively | Functional food | IIS | Antioxidant, | [ | ||
| 24% at 30 µg/mL | Medicinal | IIS | Stress Resistance, | [ | ||
| 9% at 30 µg/mL | - | - | Stress resistance | [ |
* Mean lifespan and implicated genes, pathways, and anti-aging effects in the table are the specific outcomes from the references indexed directly against the compound at the right-end column. A dash (-) sign in the column for implicated genes and pathways represents where authors did not proceed to investigate the molecular mechanism beyond the effect observed. Where different mean lifespans are not from the same study, we have referenced the appropriate literature for such. Original units of concentration used by the investigators are reported here. Additionally, where other health benefits besides the ant-aging effect have been noted for the compound in the primary research referenced, we grouped them under the heading “Others” in the column for “Anti-aging-effect”. # Plant sources of the compound in the study indexed to the reference directly at the right-end column are listed. Other sources that have been mentioned by the primary study and previous studies have also been listed along. Scientific names and common names (in parenthesis) of the plant sources are provided.