| Literature DB >> 35276888 |
Robert Percy Marshall1, Jan-Niklas Droste1, Jürgen Giessing2, Richard B Kreider3.
Abstract
Creatine monohydrate (CrM) is one of the most widely used nutritional supplements among active individuals and athletes to improve high-intensity exercise performance and training adaptations. However, research suggests that CrM supplementation may also serve as a therapeutic tool in the management of some chronic and traumatic diseases. Creatine supplementation has been reported to improve high-energy phosphate availability as well as have antioxidative, neuroprotective, anti-lactatic, and calcium-homoeostatic effects. These characteristics may have a direct impact on mitochondrion's survival and health particularly during stressful conditions such as ischemia and injury. This narrative review discusses current scientific evidence for use or supplemental CrM as a therapeutic agent during conditions associated with mitochondrial dysfunction. Based on this analysis, it appears that CrM supplementation may have a role in improving cellular bioenergetics in several mitochondrial dysfunction-related diseases, ischemic conditions, and injury pathology and thereby could provide therapeutic benefit in the management of these conditions. However, larger clinical trials are needed to explore these potential therapeutic applications before definitive conclusions can be drawn.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac infarction; chronic fatigue syndrome; hypoxia; ischemia; long COVID; mitochondriopathia; neurodegenerative diseases; noncommunicable disease; oxidative stress; stroke
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35276888 PMCID: PMC8838971 DOI: 10.3390/nu14030529
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1General overview of the metabolic role of creatine in the creatine kinase/phosphocreatine (CK/PCr) system [1]. The diagram depicts connected subcellular energy production and cellular mechanics of creatine metabolism. This chemo-mechanical energy transduction network involves structural and functional coupling of the mitochondrial reticulum (mitochondrial interactosome and oxidative metabolism), phosphagen and glycolytic system (extramitochondrial ATP production), the linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton complex (nesprins interaction with microtubules, actin polymerization, β-tubulins), motor proteins (e.g., myofibrillar ATPase machinery, vesicles transport), and ion pumps (e.g., SERCA, Na+/K+-ATPase). The cardiolipin-rich domain is represented by parallel black lines. Green sparkled circles represent the subcellular processes where the CK/PCr system is important for functionality. Several proteins of the endoplasmic reticulum–mitochondria organizing network (ERMIONE), the SERCA complex, the TIM/TOM complex, the MICOS complex, the linker of nucleoskeleton and cytoskeleton complex, and the architecture of sarcomere and cytoskeleton are not depicted for readability. ANT: adenine nucleotide translocase; CK: creatine kinase; Cr: creatine; Crn: creatinine; CRT: Na+/Cl−-dependent creatine transporter; ERMES: endoplasmic reticulum-mitochondria encounter structure; ETC: electron transport chain; GLUT-4: glucose transporter type 4; HK: hexokinase; mdm10: mitochondrial distribution and morphology protein 10; MICOS: mitochondrial contact site and cristae organizing system; NDPK: nucleoside-diphosphate kinase; NPC: nuclear pore complex; PCr: phosphocreatine; SAM: sorting and assembly machinery; SERCA: Sarco/Endoplasmic Reticulum Ca2+ ATPase; TIM: translocase of the inner membrane complex; TOM: translocase of the outer membrane complex; UCP: uncoupling protein; VDAC: voltage-dependent anion channel. Reprinted with permission. See Bonilla et al. [1] for more details about the metabolic basis of creatine in energy production and disease.
Figure 2Panel A: Intracellular cascade after injury, infarction or contusion leads to mitochondrial dysfunction. Panel B: Impact of creatine on mitochondrial dysfunction. Green shows direct increase/stimulation of Cr/PCr, red shows direct decrease/inhibition of Cr/PCr, dotted line represents indirect impact of Cr/PCr on cellular pathways. ATP is adenosine triphosphate; Cr is creatine; PCr is phosphocreatine; ROS is reactive oxygen species; mPTP is mitochondrial permeability transition pore. Adapted from Dean et al. [55].
Level of evidence for creatine supplementation in acute traumatic mitochondrial dysfunction.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sakellaris et al. [ | Traumatic brain injury | Human | 0.4 g/kg per day for 6 months | Yes | 39 | Improved self-care, cognition, behavior functions and communication | Direct effect on disease |
| Sakellaris et al. [ | Traumatic brain injury | Human | 0.4 g/kg per day for 6 months | Yes | 39 | Reduced fatigue, headache and dizziness | Direct effect on disease |
Figure 3Warburg Effect: glycolysis produces 2 ATP instead of 36 ATP, in pathological tissues even despite aerobic conditions. Glc is glucose, Oxy is oxygen, ATP is adenosine triphosphate. Adapted from Vander Heiden et al. [91].
Level of evidence for creatine supplementation for chronic, atraumatic mitochondrial dysfunction.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Guimarães-Ferreira et al. [ | - | Animal/vitro | 5 g/kg per day for 6 days | no | 39 | Decrease in ROS in muscle tissue | Anima model |
| Kato et al. [ | Bipolar disorder | Humans | None | No | 25 (disease) vs. 21 (control) | Abnormal energy phosphate metabolism in bipolar disorder | No intervention, only descriptive, observational findings |
Figure 4Mitochondrial dysfunction and non-communicable diseases. Adapted from Diaz-Vegas et al. [90].
Level of evidence of creatine’s role in noncommunicable chronic disease.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rider et al. [ | Obesity | Human | None | None | 64 | Deranged cardiac energetics and diastolic dysfunction in obesity group | Observational, disease related changes in metabolism |
| Scheuermann-Freestone et al. [ | Diabetes Type 2 | Human | None | None | 36 | Impaired myocardial and skeletal muscle metabolism (reduced PCR/ATP ratio) | Observational disease related changes in metabolism |
| Lamb et al. [ | Hypertension | Human | None | None | 24 | Altered high-energy phosphate metabolism in hypertension. Cardiac dysfunction correlates with metabolic alterations | Observational, disease related changes in metabolism |
| Gualano et al. [ | Diabetes Type 2 | Human | 5 g creatine for 12 weeks + physical activity program | Yes | 25 | Improved glycemic control in supplementation group (by GLUT-4 recruitment) | Direct effect on disease related metabolic effects |
| Earnest et al. [ | Hyper-cholester-inaemia | Human | 4 × 5 g creatine for 5 days and afterwards 2 times per day for 51 days (orally) | Yes | 34 | Minor reduction of total cholesterol during supplementation. Reduction of triacylglycerol’s and very-low-density-lipoprotein c 4 weeks after finishing supplementation | Direct effect of supplementation on metabolism. |
| Deminice et al. [ | Fatty liver | Animal | Control vs. 0.25% choline diet vs. 0.25% choline + 2% creatine diet | None | 24 | Prevention of fat liver accumulation and hepatic events in creatine-fed group | Animal model |
Level of evidence for creatine supplementation for chronic, atraumatic mitochondrial dysfunction.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Elgebaly et al. [ | - | Animal/vitro | 500 mg/kg BW | no | 6 | Better aortic flow, coronary flow, cardiac output, stroke volume, and stroke work | Animal model |
| Cisowski et al. [ | Cardiac surgery | Humans | 6 g 3 days pre-surgery, intra-surgical and two days post- surgery i.v. | yes | 40 | Reduced arrhythmic events, reduced need of ionotropic medication | Direct effect on surgical procedure |
| Ruda et al. [ | Ischemic myocardial infarct | human | 2 g bolus + 4 g/h over 2 h | Yes | 60 | Reduced arrhythmic events | Direct effect on short term outcome |
| Chida et al. [ | Dilated Cardio-myopathy | Human | None | None | 13 | Plasma BNP level was correlated negatively with the myocardial phosphocreatine/adenosine triphosphate | Observational finding |
| Roberts et al. [ | None | Animal | Oral creatine-feeding | None | Not clear | Higher cellular ATP during ischemia in creatine-fed rat hearts | Animal model |
Level of evidence for the role of creatine supplementation in individuals with traumatic and ischemic CNS injuries.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zhu et al. [ | None/induced ischemia | Animal | 2% creatine-supplemented diet for 4 weeks | None | 6 per group | Reduction in ischemia induced infarct size | Animal model |
| Turner et al. [ | None/induced hypoxia | Human | 7-ds oral creatine-supplementation | Yes | 15 | Less decrease in cognitive performance, attentional capacity, corticomotor excitability for creatine-group | Human brain metabolism |
| Hausmann et al. [ | None/induced spinal cord injury | Animal | 4 weeks oral creatine-supplementation | none | 20 | Better locomotor scores after 1 week for creatine-group. Less scar tissue for creatine-group after 2 weeks | Animal model |
| Sullivan et al. [ | None/induced traumatic brain injury | Animal | Mice: 0.1 mL/10 g/BW creatine monohydrate injection for 1, 3 or 5 days | none | 40 mice/24 rats | Reduction of brain tissue damage size by 36% mice and 50% rats | Animal model |
| Rats: 1% creatine diet for 4 weeks. | |||||||
| Prass et al. [ | None/induced experimental stroke | Animal | Creatine-rich diet (0%, 0.5%, 1%, 2% for 3 weeks | None | Unclear | Reduction of infarct size by 40% in 2% creatine-fed group | Animal model |
Level of evidence for the role of creatine supplementation in individuals with neurodegenerative disorders.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hammett et al. [ | None | Human | 20 g/d creatine for 5 days + 5 g/d for 2-days | Yes | 22 | Reduction of stress related blood oxygen level dependent in fMRI in creatine-group | Human metabolic response |
| Watanabe et al. [ | None | Human | 8 g/d for 5-days | Yes | 24 | Reduction of mental fatigue and increased brain oxygen consumption in creatine-group | Human metabolic response |
| McMorris et al. [ | None | Human | 4 × 5 g/d | yes | 20 | Better in central complex executive tasks with creatine while sleep deprivation | Human metabolic response |
| McMorris et al. [ | None | Human | 4 × 5 g/d | Yes | 15 | random number generation, forward number and spatial recall, and long-term memory | Human metabolism |
Level of evidence for the role of creatine supplementation in individuals with psychological disorders.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kondo et al. [ | Adolescent major depressive disorder | Human | 4 g/d creatine for 8 weeks | None | 15 | Reduction in children-depression symptom scores. Significant increase in brain phosphocreatine level. | Direct effect on disease (no RCT) |
| Roitman et al. [ | Treatment resistant depression | Human | 3–5 g/d creatine for 4 weeks | None | 8 unipolar depressed patients and two bipolar patients | Development of hypomania/mania in bipolar patients. Improved Hamilton Depression Rating Scale, Hamilton Anxiety Scale, and Clinical Global Impression for 7 of 8 unipolar depressed patients | Direct effect on disease (no RCT) |
| Toniolo et al. [ | Depressive episode of Bipolar Type 1 and Type 2 | Human | 6 g/d creatine for 6 weeks | Yes | 35 | No significant difference in Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale by intervention but higher remission rate in creatine supplemented group | Direct effect on disease |
| Kondo et al. [ | Adolescent with SSRI resistant major depressive disorder | Human | 0 g vs. 2 g vs. 4 g vs. 10 g creatine supplementation for 8 weeks | Yes | 34 | Clinical depression scores correlated inversely with brain phosphocreatine (PCR) levels. PCR level improved with higher dose. | Potential direct effect on disease |
Summary of literature on the effects of creatine precursors on chronic fatigue and Post-COVID syndrome.
| Study | Disease | Subject | Treatment | Randomized | Subjects | Efficacy | Effect Role |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ostojic et al. [ | Chronic Fatigue syndrome | Human | 2 g, 4 g oral Guanidinoacetic Acid for 3 months vs. placebo | Yes | 21 | Higher muscle creatine-phosphate level and better oxidative capacity. However, no significant improvement of fatigue symptoms | Direct effect on disease related metabolism |