| Literature DB >> 35200670 |
Silvia Lomartire1, Ana M M Gonçalves1,2.
Abstract
Nowadays, seaweeds are widely involved in biotechnological applications. Due to the variety of bioactive compounds in their composition, species of phylum Ochrophyta, class Phaeophyceae, phylum Rhodophyta and Chlorophyta are valuable for the food, cosmetic, pharmaceutical and nutraceutical industries. Seaweeds have been consumed as whole food since ancient times and used to treat several diseases, even though the mechanisms of action were unknown. During the last decades, research has demonstrated that those unique compounds express beneficial properties for human health. Each compound has peculiar properties (e.g., antioxidant, antimicrobial, antiviral activities, etc.) that can be exploited to enhance human health. Seaweed's extracted polysaccharides are already involved in the pharmaceutical industry, with the aim of replacing synthetic compounds with components of natural origin. This review aims at a better understanding of the recent uses of algae in drug development, with the scope of replacing synthetic compounds and the multiple biotechnological applications that make up seaweed's potential in industrial companies. Further research is needed to better understand the mechanisms of action of seaweed's compounds and to embrace the use of seaweeds in pharmaceutical companies and other applications, with the final scope being to produce sustainable and healthier products.Entities:
Keywords: bioactive compounds; health benefits; pharmaceutical application; seaweed; sustainability
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35200670 PMCID: PMC8875101 DOI: 10.3390/md20020141
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 5.118
Main biological properties and industrial applications of seaweed’s bioactive compounds.
| Class of Seaweed Bioactive Compounds | Application and Properties | Principal Source | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polysaccharides | Alginate | Used as stabilizer and thickening agent in food products and medicine | Brown seaweed | [ |
| Fucoidan | Antiproliferative, | Brown seaweed | [ | |
| Laminarin | Used in food industry and biomedicine because of its nutraceutical properties; immunostimulatory, antitumour and antioxidant activity | Brown seaweed | [ | |
| Agar | Used in food products and pharmaceutical field as jellifiers, stabilisers, thickeners and emulsifiers | Red seaweed | [ | |
| Carrageenan | Red seaweed | [ | ||
| Porphyran | Anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, antihyperlipidemic and anticancer activities | Red seaweed | [ | |
| Ulvan | Immunostimulatory, antitumoural, antiviral activities | Green seaweed | [ | |
| Polyphenols | Phlorotannin | antimicrobial, antioxidant, antiviral, anticancer, anti-inflammatory, antidiabetic properties | Brown seaweed | [ |
Figure 1Chemical structure of agarose polymer.
Figure 2Chemical structure of κ-carrageenan.
Figure 3Chemical structure of PS fucoidan.
Figure 4Chemical structure of alginic acid.
Figure 5Chemical structure of laminarin.
Figure 6Chemical structure of ulvan.
Figure 7Chemical structure of eckol (A) and phlorofucofuroeckol A (B); phlorotannins isolated from Ecklonia cava.
Pre-clinical study cases to demonstrate the potential pharmacological activity of brown, red and green seaweeds.
| Species | Seaweed Compound | Pre-Clinical Study | Pharmaceutical Property | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phylum Ochrophyta, Class Phaeophyceae | ||||
|
| Fucoxanthins | In vitro | Antitumoral activity on lung cancer cells | [ |
|
| Antitumoral activity on HCT-116, MCF-7, HepG-2 cells | [ | ||
|
| Antitumoral activity on Malme-3M, SiHa cells | [ | ||
|
| Fucoidans | Antitumoral activity on A549 cells | [ | |
| Antidiabetic activity | [ | |||
|
| Antimicrobial activity against | [ | ||
|
| Antimicrobial activity against | [ | ||
|
| Antimicrobial activity against | [ | ||
| Anticoagulant activity | [ | |||
|
| Antimicrobial activity against | [ | ||
|
| Antiviral activity against HSV-1, HSV-2, ECHO-1, HIV-1 | [ | ||
|
| Sulphate PSs | Antiviral activity against HSV-1, HVS-2 | [ | |
|
| Phenols | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
|
| AChE-inhibitory activity | [ | ||
|
| AChE-inhibitory activity | [ | ||
|
| Phlorotannins | Antitumoral activity on HFF-1, MKN-28, HT-29, Caco-2, BEL-7402, P388, ATDC5 cells | [ | |
|
| Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | ||
|
| Treatment of atopic dermatitis | [ | ||
|
| AChE-inhibitory activity | [ | ||
|
| Treatment of atopic dermatitis | [ | ||
|
| UV photoprotection | [ | ||
|
| Phlorotannins | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
|
| Phlorotannins | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
| Phlorotannins | Antiallergic effects | [ | ||
| Phlorotannins | AChE-inhibitory activity | [ | ||
|
| Phlorotannins | Hyaluronidase-inhibition activity | [ | |
|
| Phlorotannins | UV photoprotection in B16F10 melanoma cells | [ | |
|
| Fucoxanthins | In vivo | Antitumoral activity on lung cancer cells | [ |
|
| Antitumoral activity on B16-F10 cells | [ | ||
|
| Antioxidant activity and hepatoprotective ability | [ | ||
|
| Fucoidans | Anticoagulant activity | [ | |
|
| Antiviral activity against HSV-1, HSV-2, ECHO-1, HIV-1 | [ | ||
|
| Sulphate PSs | Antidiabetic activity | [ | |
|
| Phlorotannins | Antiproliferative activity on MCF-7 cells | [ | |
|
| Antiallergic effects | [ | ||
|
| Hyaluronidase-inhibition activity | [ | ||
| Phylum Rhodophyta | ||||
|
| Carrageenans | In vitro | Antiviral activity against HSV-1, HSV-2 | [ |
|
| Anticoagulant activity | [ | ||
| κ-carrageenans | Antiproliferative activity on HeLa cells, mammary cells fibroblasts | [ | ||
|
| ɩ/ε-carrageenans | Antitumoral activity on colorectal cancer stem cells | [ | |
|
| ɩ- and k-carrageenans | Antiviral activity against HSV-1, HSV-2 | [ | |
|
| Polysaccharides | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
|
| Sulphate PSs | Antiviral activity against HCV | [ | |
|
| Methanolic extract | Antidiabetic activity | [ | |
|
| ʎ-carrageenans | In vivo | Antitumoral activity on H-22 cells | [ |
|
| ι-carrageenans | Anti-obesity activity | [ | |
|
| k-carrageenans | Anti-obesity activity | [ | |
|
| Agar-type PSs | Anticancer activity on EAC cells | [ | |
|
| Polysaccharides | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
|
| Sulphate PSs | Anti-obesity, antidiabetic activities | [ | |
|
| Antitumoral activity on sarcoma 180 ascites cells | [ | ||
|
| Ethyl-acetate extract | Antidiabetic activity | [ | |
| Phylum Chlorophyta | ||||
|
| Ulvan | In vitro | Antitumoral activity on L929 cells | [ |
| Antiviral activity against IAV | [ | |||
|
| Dipertene | Antiviral activity against coronavirus strain A5Y | [ | |
| Caulerpin | Antiviral activity against BVDV | [ | ||
| Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |||
|
| Antiviral activity against HSV-1 | [ | ||
| Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |||
|
| Antiviral activity against HSV-1 | [ | ||
|
| Phenols | Antiproliferative activity on Huh-7, HeLa cells | [ | |
|
| Antiproliferative activity on PC3, HepG2 cells | [ | ||
|
| Antiproliferative activity on MCF-7, HeLa cells | [ | ||
|
| Antimicrobial activity against | [ | ||
|
| Extracts | Anti-inflammatory, anticancer activities | [ | |
| Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |||
|
| Methanolic extracts | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
|
| Antioxidant activity | [ | ||
|
| Caulerpin | In vivo | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ |
|
| Sulphated PSs | Anticoagulant activity | [ | |
|
| Ethanolic extracts | Anti-hyperglycaemic activity | [ | |
|
| Methanolic extracts | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |