| Literature DB >> 35405982 |
Lujain Bader Eddin1, Niraj Kumar Jha2, Sameer N Goyal3, Yogeeta O Agrawal3, Sandeep B Subramanya4,5, Salim M A Bastaki1, Shreesh Ojha1,5.
Abstract
α-Bisabolol is one of the important monocyclic sesquiterpenes, derived naturally from essential oils of many edible and ornamental plants. It was first obtained from Matricaria chamomilla, commonly known as chamomile or German chamomile. The available literature indicates that this plant along with other α-Bisabolol containing plants is popularly used in traditional medicine for potential health benefits and general wellbeing. Nutritional studies are indicative of the health benefits of α-Bisabolol. Numerous experimental studies demonstrated pharmacological properties of α-Bisabolol including anticancer, antinociceptive, neuroprotective, cardioprotective, and antimicrobial. This review aims to collectively present different pharmacological activities based on both in vitro and in vivo studies. In the present review using synoptic tables and figures, we comprehensively present that α-Bisabolol possesses therapeutic and protective activities, therefore, it can be used for potential health benefits based on pharmacological effects, underlying molecular mechanism, and favorable pharmaceutical properties. Based on the studies mostly performed on cell lines or animal models, it is evident that α-Bisabolol may be a promising nutraceutical and phytomedicine to target aberrant biological mechanisms which result in altered physiological processes and various ailments. Given the polypharmacological effects and pleiotropic properties, along with favorable pharmacokinetics, and dietary availability and safety, α-Bisabolol can be used as a dietary agent, nutraceutical or phytopharmaceutical agent or as an adjuvant with currently available modern medicines. The regulatory approval of this molecule for use as food additives, and in cosmetics and fragrance industry is also supportive of its human usage. Moreover, further studies are necessary to address pharmaceutical, pharmacological, and toxicological aspects before clinical or nutritional usage in humans. The biological actions and health benefits open opportunities for pharmaceutical development with pharmacological basis of its use in future therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: German chamomile tea; natural products; pharmacology; phytochemicals; sesquiterpene; α-Bisabolol
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35405982 PMCID: PMC9002489 DOI: 10.3390/nu14071370
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Percentage occurrence of α-Bisabolol in different plants.
| Plants | Percentage Occurrence | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| 56.4 | [ | |
| 91.02 | [ | |
| 93.7 | [ | |
| 8.97 | [ | |
| 11.23 | [ | |
| 23.5% | [ | |
| 6.3 | [ | |
| 59.7–93.7 | [ | |
|
| 13.3 | [ |
|
| 29–81 | [ |
| 32.6 | [ | |
|
| 9.53 | [ |
| Candeia Tree ( | 66–91 | [ |
|
| 16.0 | [ |
| 11.4 | [ | |
|
| 7.24 | [ |
| 4.9 | [ | |
| 4.8 | [ | |
|
| 14.9 | [ |
| 2.9 | [ | |
| 2 | [ | |
|
| 30.9 | [ |
| Araçá | 6.5–18.1 | [ |
| 5.3 | [ | |
| 11.1 | [ | |
|
| 42.8 | [ |
| 8.2 | [ | |
| 56.86 | [ | |
| 24.6 | [ | |
| 22.93 | [ | |
|
| 9.75 | [ |
* Physicochemical properties of α-Bisabolol.
| PubChem CID | 1549992 |
| Molecular Formula | C15H26O |
| Synonyms | (+)-α-Bisabolol, D-α-Bisabolol, (2R)-6-Methyl-2-(4-methyl-3-cyclohexenyl)-5-heptene-2-ol, Dragosantol, Camilol, Hydagen B, (+)-6R,7R-α-Bisabolol, |
| Molecular Weight | 222.37 |
| XLogP3-AA | 3.8 |
| Hydrogen Bond Donor Count | 1 |
| Hydrogen Bond Acceptor Count | Rotatable Bond Count |
| Exact Mass | 222.198365449 |
| Monoisotopic Mass | 222.198365449 |
| Topological Polar Surface Area | 20.2 Å2 |
| Heavy Atom Count | 16 |
| Formal Charge | 0 |
| Complexity | 284 |
| Isotope Atom Count | 0 |
| Defined Atom Stereocenter Count | 2 |
| Undefined Atom Stereocenter Count | 0 |
| Defined Bond Stereocenter Count | 0 |
| Undefined Bond Stereocenter Count | 0 |
| Covalently-Bonded Unit Count | 1 |
| Solubility | 1.688 mg/L @ 25 °C (est), Practically insoluble or insoluble in water, slightly soluble in ethanol |
| Density | 0.922–0.931 |
| LogP | 5.070 (est) |
| Refractive Index | 1.491–1.500 |
| Food additive class | Flavoring agent |
* Compiled from the PubChem substances.
Therapeutic effects and demonstrated mechanisms of α-Bisabolol in skin disorders.
| Skin Disorders | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | Dose/Route/ | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
| α-Bisabolol | 1% topical spray | Randomized controlled trial on chronic venous leg ulcer patients | ↓ wound and ulcer surface area | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 0.3 g/100 g cream twice daily for 8 weeks | Prospective, randomized, reference-controlled, double-blind, two-center and four-armed parallel group study on patients with atopic dermatitis | ↓ pruritis, inflammation | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 1% cream once-daily for 30 days | Single-center, single-arm, prospective, | ↓ melasma area and | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
Figure 1Effects of α-Bisabolol on skin disorders. ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
Figure 2Neuroprotective mechanisms of α-Bisabolol against neurodegeneration. ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
Neuroprotective effects and underlying mechanisms of α-Bisabolol.
| Neuroprotective | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | Dose/Route/ | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
| α-Bisabolol | 5, 25, and 250 μmol/L for 7 days | Rotenone (500 μmol/L) induced neurotoxicity in | ↓ mortality and motor deficits, ↓ thiol level | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 50 mg/kg i.p, 30 min before rotenone for 4 weeks | Rotenone (2.5 mg/kg) induced Parkinson’s disease | ⇥ neuronal loss, ↓ MDA, ↑ GSH, SOD and CAT, ↓ glial activation, ↓ IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α, iNOS and COX-2, ↑ Bcl-2, ↓ Bax, caspases-3, 9 and cytochrome-C, restored ATP and MC-I activity | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 5, 10 μg/mL for 2 h in N2a cells and 25, 50 and 100 μg/mL in elegans | Aβ25–35 peptide (50 μM for 24 h) induced toxicity in N2a cells and | ⇥ cholinesterase and β-secretase, ↓ ROS and RNS | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 5 mg/mL for 2 h | Aβ25–35 peptide (50 μM for 24 h) induced toxicity in PC12 cells | ↓ Aβ aggregation | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 5 and 10 μg/mL for 2 h | Aβ25–35 peptide (50 μM for 24 h) induced toxicity in Neuro-2a cells | ↓ ROS and RNS, ↓ β-secretase and AchE activities, ↓ Bax, caspase3, and ↑ Bcl-2 | [ |
| α-Bisabolol β-D-fucopyranoside | 10–50 μg/mL | Aβ25–35 (100 μM for 24 h, 48 h, 96 h, 9 d) induced toxicity in Neuro 2a cells | Inhibited AChE, ↓ H2O2 and OH•, ↓ Aβ aggregation | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 50, 100 and 200 mg/kg/day, p.o | Permanent occlusion of the middle cerebral artery induced cerebral ischemia in mice | ↓ infarct size, ↑ motor performance, ↑ crossings and rearings | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease, ⇥; activity inhibition.
Figure 3α-Bisabolol mediated anticancer actions and demonstrated mechanisms. ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
Anticancer effects and demonstrated mechanisms of α-Bisabolol in the experimental models.
| Anticancer Effects | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | Dose/Route/Duration | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
| α-Bisabolol | 0 to 32 μmol/L for 24 h | EC cell lines including RL95-2, ECC001 and ECC003 cells | (-) EC cells growth | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 35, 45 or 55 μM for C6 glioma cells and 55, 65 or 75 μM for U138-MG | U138-MG human and C6 rat glioma cell lines | ↓ cell viability | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 100 and 250 μM | Human and rat glioma cell lines | ↓ cell viability | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 1 mM | Human prostate cancer cell line PC-3, human cervical carcinoma cell line Hela, human esophageal ECA-109, and human liver carcinoma cell line HepG2 | ↑ caspases 3, 8 and 9 | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 0 t0 100 μM for 24 h | NSCLC cell line A549 | (-) migration of A549 cells, (-) PI3K/AKT, | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 0–250 μM | KLM1, Panc1, MIA Paca2 and KP4 human pancreatic cancer cell | ↓ cells viability, | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 1.56 μM | KLM1, KP4 and Panc1 human pancreatic cancer cell lines | (-) motility of cells | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 0, 3, 15, 30, 60, 125, 250 μM | CML-T1primary human acute leukemia cell line | ↓ cells viability, | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 300 µL intra-mammary injection (3.6 mg and 10 mg per mouse) | HER2/neu transgenic mice | ↓ tumor mass | [ |
| α-Bisabolol and its derivative | 62.5 μM and 125 μM, | KLM1 and Panc1 human pancreatic cancer cell lines, BALB/c nude mice implanted with KLM1; cells (1 × 107 cells/100 μL, s.c.) into femoral area | ↑ cell death | [ |
| α-Bisabolol β-D-fucopyranoside | IC50 > 100 μM | human lung carcinoma (A549), colon adeno-carcinoma (DLD-1), breast adeno-carcinoma (MCF-7), melanoma (SK-MEL-2), ovary teratocarcinoma (PA-1), prostate adeno-carcinoma (PC-3), pancreas adeno-carcinoma (PANC 05.04), glioma (U-251), glioblastoma (U-87) and murine glioma (GL-261) | ↑ α-Bisabolol cytotoxicity | [ |
| α-Bisabolol-based thiosemicarbazones compounds | 0.25 to 250 mg/mL | Melanoma UACC-62, breast MCF-7, breast resistant NCI-ADR, lung NCI-460, leukemia K-562, ovarian OVCAR, prostate PCO-3, and colon HT29 cell lines | (-) cell growth | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease, (-); reduce, ⇥; activity inhibition.
Figure 4Antinociceptive mechanisms of α-Bisabolol. ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
The anti-nociceptive actions of α-Bisabolol.
| Antinociceptive Effects | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | Dose/Route/ | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
| α-Bisabolol | 200 mg/kg p.o | IONX-induced acute orofacial neuropathic pain in rats | ↓ mechanical hypersensitivity | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 50 mg/kg, p.o | FCA (25 μL, i.p.) and PLSN induced pain in mice | ↓ mechanical and thermal hyperalgesia | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 25 or 50 mg/kg, p.o 1 h before the local injection of inducing agents | Formalin (20 μL of 2% s.c.), capsaicin (20 μL of 2.5 µg, s.c.) or glutamate (40 μL of 25 mM, s.c.) induced orofacial nociception | ↓ orofacial pain | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 30, 56, 100, and 180 mg/kg p.o. of α-Bisabolol alone | Formalin (50 µL of 1%, s.c.) induced nociception | ↓ nociception | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 25, 50, 100 and 200 mg/kg p.o | Carrageenan (20 μL 1% | ↓ paw licking | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 100, 200, or 400 mg/kg p.o., or 50, 100, or 200 mg/mL topical 60 min before injection | Formalin (20 μL of 1.5% s.c.), cinnamaldehyde (13.2 μg/lip) induced nociception in rodents | ↓ face rubbing | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 50, 100 or 200 mg/kg, p.o | Cyclophosphamide (400 mg/kg, i.p.), | ↓ visceral pain | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 50–200 mg/mL ointment | Hypertonic saline (20 μL of 5 M NaCl)-induced corneal nociception in mice | ↓ eye wiping | [ |
| α-Bisabolol nanocapsules | 100 or 200 mg/mL | Hypertonic saline (20 μL of 5M NaCl)-induced corneal nociception in mice | ↓ eye wiping | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 50, 100 or 200 mg/kg, p.o | Acetic acid (0.6%, i.p.), Capsaicin (50 μL/animal, intracolonic), Formalin (10%, 10 μL/animal, intracolonic), (0.75%, 50 μL/animal, intracolonic) induced visceral nociception in mice | ↓ abdominal constrictions | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 0.5, 1, 5 and 10 mM | Supramaximal stimulation consisted of 50–100 μs isolated rectangular voltage pulses applied on mice sciatic nerves | ↓ nerve excitability | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 1–0.5% mouthwash | postoperative complications of maxillofacial surgeries, a randomized, controlled, triple-blind clinical trial | ↓ pain during brushing | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
Figure 5Schematic summary of cardioprotective actions of α-Bisabolol. ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
Cardioprotective effects and mechanisms of α-Bisabolol.
| Cardioprotective Effects | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | Dose/Route/ | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
| α-Bisabolol | 25 mg/kg, i.p for 10 days | Isoproterenol (85 mg/kg, s.c. for 2 days) induced myocardial infarction in rats | ↓ LDH, ↓ infarct size | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 25 mg/kg, i.p daily for 10 days | Isoproterenol (85 mg/kg, s.c. for 2 days) induced myocardial infarction in rats | ↑ CK and LDH, ↓ LOOH, TBARS, ↑ SOD, catalase and GSH, ↓ Ca2+ overload | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 25 mg/kg, i.p daily for 10 days | Isoproterenol (85 mg/kg, s.c. for 2 days) induced myocardial infarction in rats | ↓ CK | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease, (-); reduce.
The antimicrobial actions of α-Bisabolol against different bacterial strains.
| Antimicrobial Actions | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Compound | Dose/Route/ | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
| α-Bisabolol | 4–512 μg/mL (for bacteria) |
| Inhibited microbial growth | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 1024 μg/mL | Inhibited microbial growth | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 1024 µg/mL | ↓ MIC for tetracycline and norfloxacin | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 0.1% |
| ↓ colonies number | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 0.5–2 mM | ↑ effect of co-administered antibiotics | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 0.281–9 mM for 3 days | ↓ fungal growth | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 5, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200 μg/mL | ↓ fungal growth | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 1 µg/mL |
| ↓ fungal growth | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 1000–31.25 μM | ↓ cell viability | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 1000–6.25 μg/mL |
| ↓ parasite growth | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | IC50 = 9.5, 16.0 | ↓ parasite growth | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 1.86–60 μg/mL | MHOM/BR/76/Ma-76 | (-) parasite growth | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 50, 200, and 1000 mg/kg p.o for 14 days | 107 stationary-phase | (-) parasite growth | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 25 and 100 μM |
| (-) parasite growth | [ |
| α-Bisabolol | 30 mg/kg, p.o, once daily for 28 days | ↓ parasite load | [ | |
| α-Bisabolol | 1%, 2.5%, 5% applied ointment, 200 mg/kg p.o. for 21 days | Inoculated 3 × 107 parasites in the left hind footpad of hamsters | ↓ lesion thickness | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease, (-); reduce.
Effects of α-Bisabolol in preclinical models of gastrointestinal diseases.
| Dose/Route/Duration | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 100 mg/kg p.o. | Ethanol (96%, 1 mL per animal) induced gastric damage in rats | ↓ gastric damage | [ |
| 100 or 200 mg/kg p.o. | Ethanol (0.2 mL/animal p.o.) and Indomethacin (20 mg/kg p.o.) induced ulcer model in mice | ↓ gastric lesions | [ |
| 100 and 200 mg/kg, p.o. | Ethanol (0.2 mL) induced gastric lesion in mice | ↓ MDA, MPO, ↑ SOD, ↓ neutrophils influx | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
Nephroprotective effects of α-Bisabolol.
| 100 mg/kg p.o. | Clamping of the renal artery in the left kidney for 60 min. in rats and | ↓ creatinine, urea, uric acid | [ |
| 1000, 500, 250, 125, 62.5 and 31.25 μM | Ischemia/reperfusion model on human tubular kidney cells (HK2) by anaerobic chamber method | ↑ cell viability, ↓ apoptosis, ↓ TBARS, (-) NADPH oxidase ↑ GSH, ↓ NOX4, ↑ ΔΨm, ↓ KIM-1 | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease, (-); reduce.
Anti-inflammatory effects of α-Bisabolol in different experimental models.
| Dose/Route/ | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cells treated with: 2.5, 5, 10 μM for 24 h | AGEs (50μg/mL for 2 h) induced OA in chondrocytes | ↓ iNOS, COX-2, TNF-α, p65 PGE2, nitrite, IL-6, ↓ MMP13 | [ |
| 30, 50, or 100 mg/kg, p.o, 4 h before LPS | LPS (25 µg/25 µL intranasal) induced acute lung inflammation in mice | ↓ neutrophils, ↓ MPO, ↓ AHR, ↓ elastance, ↓ MIP-2 and KC | [ |
| 560, 860 and 1200 μM | LPS (10 μg/mL for 24 h) induced inflammation in human myometria biopsies | ↓ TNF-α, IL-1β | [ |
| 50 mg/kg, p.o | Carrageenan (100 μL of 1% ( | ↓ TNF-α | [ |
| In vitro: 0.5, 1, 3, 10, 30, or 90 μg/mL | Zymosan (1 mg/cavity, i.p.) induced neutrophils in peritoneal cavity of mice and Cecal ligation and puncture induced systemic infection | ↑ phagocytosis of neutrophils, ↓ leukocytes, ↓ NO, ↓ mortality | [ |
| 25 and 100 μM for 2h | LPS (500 ng/mL) induced inflammatory response in RAW264.7 macrophages cells | ↓ NO, PGE2, ↓ iNOS, COX-2, ↓ NF-jB, AP-1, ↓ pERK, p-p38 | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.
The antioxidant actions of α-Bisabolol.
| Dose/Route/ | Model | Major Mechanisms | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.9 to 31 g/m | ↑ LACL inhibition | [ | |
| 1000 μg/mL to 62.5 μg/mL | In vitro tests (DPPH and ABTS) | ↓ concentration of free radicals | [ |
Symbols indications: ↑; increase, ↓; decrease.