| Literature DB >> 35187021 |
Ravindran Vini1, Juberiya M Azeez1, Viji Remadevi1, T R Susmi1, R S Ayswarya1, Anjana Sasikumar Sujatha1, Parvathy Muraleedharan2, Lakshmi Mohan Lathika1, Sreeja Sreeharshan1.
Abstract
Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) have been used in hormone related disorders, and their role in clinical medicine is evolving. Tamoxifen and raloxifen are the most commonly used synthetic SERMs, and their long-term use are known to create side effects. Hence, efforts have been directed to identify molecules which could retain the beneficial effects of estrogen, at the same time produce minimal side effects. Urolithins, the products of colon microbiota from ellagitannin rich foodstuff, have immense health benefits and have been demonstrated to bind to estrogen receptors. This class of compounds holds promise as therapeutic and nutritional supplement in cardiovascular disorders, osteoporosis, muscle health, neurological disorders, and cancers of breast, endometrium, and prostate, or, in essence, most of the hormone/endocrine-dependent diseases. One of our findings from the past decade of research on SERMs and estrogen modulators, showed that pomegranate, one of the indirect but major sources of urolithins, can act as SERM. The prospect of urolithins to act as agonist, antagonist, or SERM will depend on its structure; the estrogen receptor conformational change, availability and abundance of co-activators/co-repressors in the target tissues, and also the presence of other estrogen receptor ligands. Given that, urolithins need to be carefully studied for its SERM activity considering the pleotropic action of estrogen receptors and its numerous roles in physiological systems. In this review, we unveil the possibility of urolithins as a potent SERM, which we are currently investigating, in the hormone dependent tissues.Entities:
Keywords: PhytoSERM; estrogen receptor; pomegranate (Punica granatum L.); selective estrogen receptor modulators; urolithin
Year: 2022 PMID: 35187021 PMCID: PMC8849129 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2021.800990
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1The figure depicts various mechanisms by which Urolithin A (UA) is reported to regulate mitochondrial function. Many of these are also known to be modulated via Estrogen Receptor α (ER α). Here, we illustarate pathways that could be mediated by urolithins via ER α and, hence, produce a robust mitochondrial pool maintaining a healthy pool of cells.
Figure 2Depicts pathways by which urolithins, mainly Urolithin A and Urolithin B, can act in different tissues were U represents either UA or UB. Some of these beneficial effects might be mediated by Estrogen Receptor α (ER α) since these pathways have known to be modulated by Estrogen receptors.
The table consolidates the relevant studies related to Urolithins and their significant outcome.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UA and UB | Estrogenic/Anti-estrogenic | MCF-7 | 0.1–40 μm | Proliferative, but prevents E2 induced proliferation. Binds to ERα and ERβ with different affinity. UA has higher affinity | Estrogen receptors | UA and UB have estrogenic and anti-estrogenic activity | Larrosa et al., 2006 ( |
| UA | Colon inflammation | Male Fischer rats induced with acute colitis by dextran sodium sulfate | UA:15 mg kg/ day | Pomegranate extract and UA decreased inflammation markers and favorably modulated the gut microbiota. UA preserved colonic architecture | UA decreased inflammation markers like iNOS, cycloxygenase-2, PTGES. and PGE2 in colonic mucosa | UA probably the most active anti-inflammatory compound derived from pomegranate ingestion in healthy subjects, while in colonic inflammation group the effects may be by non-metabolized ellagitannin-related fraction | Larrosa et al., 2010 ( |
| UA, UB, mUA, mUB | Alzheimer's disease |
| 10–100 μM | Urolithins passes BBB criteria, urolithin reduces Aβ fibrillation | NA | Urolithins can reduce Aβ fibrillation | Yuan et al., 2015 ( |
| UA | Prostate cancer | LNCaP cell line | 40 μM | UA increase cells in G1-phase, induction of apoptosis | UA upregulates CDKN1A | A potential chemopreventive agent for prostate cancer | Sánchez-González et al., 2016 ( |
| UA and UB | Endometrial cancer | ECC1, Ishikawa cell | 0.1–50 μm | Antiproliferative, G2/M arrest, ERα modulation | Cell cycle proteins, suppresses ERα, enhances ERβ, and PGR, Ps2, GREB1, down GRIP1 | Antiproliferative in in endometrial cancer | Zhang et al., 2016 ( |
| UA, UB, UC, and UD | Lifespan extension | Bacteria: | 25–50 μM, 8 h | Mitophagy induction | UA lowered | UA improves mitochondrial and muscle function | Ryu et al., 2016 ( |
| UA, UB, UC | Pheochromocytoma | PC12 cells | 10–300 μg/ml | UC treatment increased lactate dehydrogenase release and membrane lipid peroxidation, and induced cell apoptosis, cell cycle arrest at S phase, and Reactive oxygen species (ROS) | Apoptosis Pathway: Bcl-2/Bax caspase 9 and caspase 3 | UC, showed potent cytotoxicity in PC12 cells compared to EA | Yin et al., 2017 ( |
| UA and UB | Diabetic cardiomyopathy | Wistar rats induced with type-II diabates | 2.5 mg/kg /day: IP 3 weeks | Prevented early response of cardiac cells to hyperglyceamia, improved myocardial microenvironment, and maximal rate of ventricular pressure rise, recovery of cardiomyocyte contractility, and calcium dynamics | SERCA2/PLB Ratio increase and Reduced CX3CL1 when compared to diabetic group | Prevents the initial inflammatory response of myocardial tissue to hyperglycemia | Savi et al., 2017 ( |
| UA and UB | Toxicity study | Human peripheral lymphocytes | 0.0006–2.29 mg/ml | No changes or frameshifts | NA | The NOAEL was the highest dose tested,5% UA by weight in the diet, or 3,451 mg/kg bw/day in males and 3,826 mg/kg bw/day in females | Heilman et al., 2017 ( |
| UA UA, UB | Skeletal muscle mass | C2C12 myotubes | 15 μM | UB not UA enhances differentiation of C2C12 myotubes UB induces muscle hypertrophy, reduces muscle atrophy | Represses ubiquitin proteasome pathway. crosstalk between the AR and the mTORC1 pathway, possibly via AMPK | UB has potential for the treatment of muscle mass loss | Rodriguez et al., 2017 ( |
| UA and EA | Cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity | Male Sprague Dawley rats | 50 mg/kg body weight-5 days | UA reduced creatinine and tubular apoptotic cells in Cisplatin-induced kidney damage | Reduced NF-kb and NOS3, Iba1 induced by cisplatin in kidney | UA mitigates cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity in rats | Guada et al.,2017 ( |
| UA, UB, UC | Prostate cancer | LNCap cells | 10–40 μM | Urolithins inhibited proliferation of LNCaP prostate cancer cells. The mixtures of bicalutamide with UA and UB had additive anti-proliferative effect. Combinations of bicalutamide with UA and UB had attenuated pro-apoptotic activity | NA | The differences in activity of urolithins in prostate cancer imply health benefits and interactions will depend on the type of produced ellagitannins metabolite | Stanisławska et al.,2018 ( |
| UA | Anti-inflammatory potential in macrophages | J774.1 murine macrophage HEK,293 cell lines | 1–50 μM | UA strong inhibitor of M1 (LPS) macrophage polarization, UA elevates autophagic flux in macrophages | Inhibit p65 nuclear transclocation | Increased activity of the autophagic cellular recycling machinery aids the anti-inflammatory bioactivity of UA | Boakye et al., 2018 ( |
| UA | Colorectal cancer | SW620 | 1–30 μM | UA decreased cell proliferation, and cell migration, Induced autophagy, and apoptosis. Suppressed cell cycle progression | Induced LC3 | UA induces autophagy and inhibit CRC cell growth and metastasis | Zhao et al., 2018 ( |
| UA, UB, Iso-UA, and UA conjugates | Breast cancer | MCF-7 | 1–50 μM | Alycones exerted antiproliferative and estrogenic/antiestrogenic activities but both their glucuronide and sulfate conjugates lacked these activities | NA | Antiproliferative and estrogen receptor modulatory activity in breast cancer cells | Ávila-Gálvez et al., 2018 ( |
| UA | Effect on immune cells | Murine CD4+ T cells | 5–50 μM | UA regulaes of Ca2+ entry into CD4+ T cells leading to suppression of CD4+ T cell activation | Upregulates the expression of miR-10a-5p which in turn decreases store-operated Ca2+ entry (SOCE), by downregulating Orai1 and STIM1/2 expression | UA could be used a natural immune suppressant during various inflammatory disorders including inflammatory bowel disease | Zhang et al., 2019 ( |
| UA | Alzhimers disease (AD) | PPswe/PS1ΔE9 (APP/PS1) mouse model of AD | 300 mg/kg | UA ameliorated cognitive impairment, prevented neuronal apoptosis, and enhanced neurogenesis, attenuated Aβ deposition, and peri-plaque microgliosis and astrocytosis in the cortex and hippocampus | UA enhanced cerebral AMPK activation, decreased P65-NF-κB activation and P38MAPK, and suppressed Bace1 and APP degradation | UA imparted cognitive protection by protecting neurons from death and triggering neurogenesis via anti-inflammatory signaling | Gong, 2019 ( |
| UA | Tissue deconjugation of UA | LPS administered male Sprague-Dawley rats | 26 mg / kg b.w | Tissue deconjugation of UA-glur to UA after lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammation | NA | Tissue deconjugation of Uro-A glur to UA after lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced inflammation, explaining systemic | Ávila-Gálvez et al., 2019 ( |
| UA | Mitochondrial and cellular health | Healthy, sedentary elderly individuals | 1,000–2,000 mg of UA delivered orally | UA has a favorable safety profile UA bioavailable in plasma modulated plasma acylcarnitines and skeletal muscle | Mitochondrial gene modulation | UA induces a molecular signature of improved mitochondrial and cellular health | Andreux et al., 2019 ( |
| UA and synthetic analog UAS03 | Beneficial activities at gut epithelium | HT29 | Oral doses 20 mg/kg at 6–24 h | Anti-inflammatory activities and enhanced gut barrier function | Activation of aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) (Nrf2)-dependent pathways to upregulate epithelial tight junction proteins | Attenuated colitis in pre-clinical models by remedying barrier dysfunction in addition to anti-inflammatory activities | Singh et al., 2019 ( |
| UA | Increase availability by nanoparticle encapsulation | Male Sprague/Dawley rats | Oral gavage a single dose of 50 mg plain UA, 25 mg P2Ns UA, or 10 mg or 25 mg P2Ns-GA UA | Nanoparticle encapsulated UA led to a seven-fold enhancement in oral bioavailability. It attenuated the histopathological hallmarks of cisplatin-induced AKI and reduced mortality by 63% | Nanoparticle UA therapy downregulated Nrf2 and P53-inducible genes and involved anti-apoptotic signaling | Nanoparticles greatly increase the oral bioavailability of UA leading to improved survival rates in AKI mice, in part by reducing renal oxidative and apoptotic stress | Zou et al., 2019 ( |
| UA | Type 2 diabetes | Type 2 diabetes model was induced by HFD; and streptozotocin (85 mg/kg) | UA (50 mg/kg/d) alone or UroA-chloroquine combination for 8 weeks | UA improved symptoms of diabetic mice, pancreatic function indexes. | Upregulated light chain 3-II (LC3II) and beclin1, downregulated sequestosome 1 (p62), and decreased apoptotic protein cleaved caspase3 partly by (p-Akt)-p-mTOR pathway | UA protects pancreas against diabetes | Tuohetaerbaike et al., 2020 ( |
| UA | Osteoarthritis | Primary chondrocytes | 1–15 μM 1–7 days | No UA cytotoxicity | UA protected chondrocytes against IL-1β-induced injury by activating the mitogen-activated kinase (MAPK)/nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) signaling pathways | UA attenuated IL-1β-induced cell injury in chondrocytes via its anti-inflammatory action | Ding et al., 2020 ( |
| UA | Obesity | Six-week-old male C57BL/6 mice 4-week-old male leptin-deficient | 30 mg kg | UA increases energy expenditure by enhancing thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue and inducing browning of white adipose tissue | UA enhances adipose tissue production of triiodothyronine (T3), which activates thermogenic genes PGC1a and UCP-1 | UA suggested as potent anti-obesity agent | Xia et al., 2020 ( |
| UA | Alzheimer's disease | SH-SY5Y cells | UA:100 nM | UA prevented Aβ-induced mitochondrial calcium influx, mtROS accumulation, Tau phosphorylation, and cell death in neuronal cells | UA significantly reduced high glucose-induced TGM2 expression and disrupted AIP–AhR complex. | UA may prevent diabetes mellitus associated AD pathogenesis by reducing TGM2-dependent Mitochondria-associated membranes (MAM) formation and maintaining mitochondrial calcium and ROS homeostasis | Lee et al., 2020 ( |
| UA | Campylobacteriosis | Abiotic IL-10−/− mice infected with | 0.114 mg /kg/B.W/day | UA lowered pathogen loads in ileum, but not colon. Improved clinical outcome and less inflammatory sequelae of infection. Reduced intestinal and systemic pro-inflammatory immune responses | Lowered IFN-γ, TNF-α | Oral UA administration is a promising treatment option for acute | Mousavi et al., 2021 ( |
| UA UB | Anti-inflammatory activity | THP-1-derived macrophages, RAW 264.7 macrophages | 40 μM | UA was the most active metabolite in terms of LPS-induced inflammatory response inhibition | Attenuate NFκB p65 nuclear translocation, and stimulate ERK1/2 phosphorylation | UA the most potent in inflammatory response | Bobowska et al., 2021 ( |
| UA | SARS-CoV-2, main protease (Mpro) inhibitors | Assay kit consisting of recombinant Mpro | 2–50 μM | Urolithins inhibited severe acute respiratory syndrome corona virus (SARS-CoV-2) SARS-CoV-2 Mpro (by 6.6–100.0%) and bound directly to the Mpro protein | Inhibition of Mpro | Inhibitory effects of tannins and their metabolites on SARS-CoV-2 Mpro | Li et al., 2021 ( |
The UA denotes Urolithin A, UB Urolithin B and UC Urolithin C. The mUA is methylated urolithin A, while the mUB is urolithin B.