| Literature DB >> 35807828 |
Kamil Wdowiak1, Jarosław Walkowiak2, Robert Pietrzak3, Aleksandra Bazan-Woźniak3, Judyta Cielecka-Piontek1.
Abstract
Hesperidin and hesperetin are polyphenols that can be found predominantly in citrus fruits. They possess a variety of pharmacological properties such as neuroprotective and antidiabetic activity. However, the bioavailability of these compounds is limited due to low solubility and restricts their use as pro-healthy agents. This paper described the limitations resulting from the low bioavailability of the presented compounds and gathered the methods aiming at its improvement. Moreover, this work reviewed studies providing pieces of evidence for neuroprotective and antidiabetic properties of hesperidin and hesperetin as well as providing a detailed look into the significance of reported modes of action in chronic diseases. On account of a well-documented pro-healthy activity, it is important to look for ways to overcome the problem of poor bioavailability.Entities:
Keywords: antidiabetic; bioavailability; hesperetin; hesperidin; neuroprotection
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35807828 PMCID: PMC9268531 DOI: 10.3390/nu14132647
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
Figure 1The chemical structures of hesperidin (a) and hesperetin (b). The structures were obtained via ACD/ChemSketch 2021.2.1.
Collected attempts to increase the bioavailability of hesperidin and hesperetin.
| Hesperidin | ||
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| Hesperidin–chitosan complexes | The enhancement of solubility by 1.6-, 2.7-, and 3.8-fold and visible correlation between improved solubility and antioxidant activity. The greater the solubility improvement was, the better antioxidant activity reported | [ |
| Inclusion complex of hesperidin with HP-β-CD | Obtaining the complex translated into increased solubility by 95-fold with respect to unmodified compound | [ |
| Solid lipid nanoparticles loaded with Hesperidin | The increase of solubility by 20-fold. Impact on apparent permeability, leading to enhancement nearly by 5-fold. After oral administration, the overall bioavailability increased by 4.5-times in the study performed in a rat model. The obtained system affected biological activity as well, providing attenuation of Doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity and oxidative stress | [ |
| Amorphous systems of Hesperidin with mesoporous material | Significant improvement in solubility by 51-fold for the best system and an impact on dissolution rate, better dissolution behavior in terms of apparent solubility | [ |
| Nanoparticles of Hesperidin loaded by PLGA-Poloxamer 407 | In in vitro release profiles, sustained and slow release, and higher apparent solubility were observed. This modification provided stronger inhibitory activity on the breast cancer cells | [ |
| Hesperidin-β-CD inclusion complexes | The systems showed better behavior in dissolution studies and also demonstrated an enhancement of antibacterial and antioxidant activity compared with unmodified hesperidin | [ |
| Inclusion complexes of Hesperidin with HP-β-CD | The obtained complexes showed an improvement in dissolution rate, and antioxidant as well as antimicrobial activity | [ |
| A Solid self-microemulsifying system with Hesperidin composing of Maisine CC, Tween 80 and PEG 400 | Significantly better dissolution rate profiles than that of free hesperidin, which enabled the release of almost all polyphenol from the system (>98%) after 60 min. Moreover, formulation showed better therapeutic activity for the management of diabetes mellitus in vivo | [ |
| Solid nanocrystals | In the solubility studies, the system provided enhancement in solubility by 4.8-fold with respect to pure compound, faster dissolution, and higher apparent solubility | [ |
| Inclusion system of Hesperidin with octenyl succinic anhydride modified sweet potato starch | The increase in solubility by 6.52-fold in the optimal conditions | [ |
| Nanocrystals by combining Hesperidin with HPMC E5 and Poloxamer 188 | The systems enhanced the solubility by 5-times as well as the drug dissolution rate. The systems were characterized by comparable antioxidant activity with regard to pure compound. | [ |
| Hesperidin-PEG 6000 complex | Enhancement of solubility by 21-fold. | [ |
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| Cocrystals with different excipients such as caffeine, nicotinamide and picolinic acid | It translated into about 5-times better solubility as compared with pure substance. The parachute effect was observed in dissolution rate studies. Moreover, significant improvements in biological activity and pharmacokinetic profile were noticed. | [ |
| Eutectic mixtures | In dissolution studies, the increase of apparent solubility was evident and reached about 3-times higher than the pure compound. The biological models revealed a direct impact of solubility on antioxidant and antihemolytic activity | [ |
| Complexes of Hesperetin with β-CD and HP-β-CD | Higher solubility by 25-fold for β-CD and 467-fold for HP-β-CD complexes. | [ |
| Nanocrystals | Significant enhancement in dissolution rate and apparent solubility was reported. In dissolution rate studies, authors reported the spring effect, leading to a dramatic increase in solubility in a short time from the beginning. However, the amount of dissolved substance decreased over time, and thus the parachute effect was not observed. | [ |
| The systems of Hesperetin with Mg- or Ag-modified SBA-16 carriers | In dissolution studies, higher apparent solubility and dissolution velocity were reported. However, the total drug release was unnoticed. | [ |
| Nanoemulsion | The authors reported 5.67-fold higher oral bioavailability | [ |
| Nanoparticles composed of Hesperetin and Eudragit E 100 | Systems were characterized by sustained release with a pattern of initial rapid release of about 30% of the drug in the first 8 h, followed by a slow and continuous release of approximately 82% drug release in the next 24 h. | [ |
| Self-assembling rebaudioside A nanomicelles with hesperetin | A drug release study revealed that prepared systems considerably increased apparent solubility and provided sustained release of the compound, reaching almost 81% at 24 h time point. This approach had a positive impact on the biological activity of hesperidin with respect to anticancer efficacy. | [ |
| Formulations of hesperetin-D-alpha-tocopheryl polyethylene glycol 1000 succinate micelles and hesperetin-phosphatidylcholine complexes | The micelles formation was connected to an increase of solubility of 21.5-fold, whereas phosphatidylcholine complexes by 20.7-fold. Moreover, the solubility enhancement translated into a 4.2-fold boost in antioxidant activity for micelles and 3.9-fold for complexes. A significant improvement in bioavailability was also reported. The AUC increased by 16.2-fold for micelles formulation, whereas for complexes it was 18.0-fold. | [ |
| Hesperetin complexes with β-CD and methylated-β-CD | The complexation caused an increase in apparent solubility and improved the dissolution profile. It also helped to increase the anti-inflammatory activity by reducing IL-6 secretion from LPS-stimulated macrophages. | [ |
| Hesperetin-PLGA nanoparticles | Sustained release from formulation, which enabled a constant, slow-release within 7 days. Enhancement in the cytotoxic activity of prepared delivery system as compared with free compound. | [ |
| Biocompatible gold nanoparticles of hesperetin | Sustained release of hesperetin from nanoparticles and increased cytotoxicity on cancer cells. | [ |
| Chitosan-based nanoparticles | Sustained release of hesperetin and enhanced anticancer activity by an increase of inhibitory effect on colon cancer cell growth by 6-fold. | [ |
Collected studies of pure compounds suggesting neuroprotective activity of hesperidin and hesperetin.
| Hesperidin | ||
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| Human neuroblastoma SK-N-SH cells |
Maintenance of mitochondrial membrane potential Antioxidant—increase in glutathione, SOD, GSH-Px levels Antiapoptotic—downregulation of Bax, caspase-3, 9; upregulation of Bcl-2 | [ |
| Neuro-2A cells |
Inhibition of β-amyloid-induced autophagy Improved glucose utilization | [ |
| In silico |
Inhibition of cholinoesterases—acetylcholinesterase (AChE), butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) Inhibition of β-secretase 1 (BACE 1) | [ |
| female C57 BL/6 mice |
Antidepressant-like effect Improvement of cognitive performance and spatial memory Antioxidant—increase in antioxidant enzymes activity and glutathione levels | [ |
| Male Albino Wistar rats |
Decrease in AChE activity Improved learning and memory Suppression of APP, β-amyloid, β-, γ-secretases expression | [ |
| Male APP/PS1 mice |
Improvement in learning and memory Anti-inflammatory and anti-oxidant via activation of Akt/Nrf2 and inhibition of RAGE/NF-κB signaling pathways | [ |
| In silico |
Anti-amyloidogenic—BACE-1 inhibition Antioxidant | [ |
| APPswe/PS1dE9 mice |
Improvement in learning and memory Amelioration of recognition memory Antioxidant—an increase of antioxidative defense; decrease in GKS-3β activity | [ |
| Adult male C57BL/6 mice |
Amelioration of motor dysfunction Anti-inflammatory—suppression of microglia activation; inhibition of COX-2 and attenuation of inflammatory cytokines—IL-1β, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α release | [ |
| Male Wistar rats |
Anti-apoptotic—a decrease of Bcl-2 and increase of Bax expression Amelioration of learning and memory Antioxidant—increase in glutathione levels; enhancement of antioxidant enzymes activity—SOD, CAT, GPx | [ |
| male transgenic APP/PS1–21 mice |
Decrease in microglial activation Decrease in TGF-1β expression Anti-amyloidogenic—attenuation in β-amyloid depositions accumulation and APP expression | [ |
| Swiss male albino mice |
Attenuation of AChE activity Anti-inflammatory—inhibition of NF-κB pathway and the release of COX-2 and iNOS Inhibition of astrocytes activation Improved memory consolidation | [ |
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| adult male mice (C57BL/6N, wild type) |
Decrease in oxidative stress (via increase of Nrf2 HO-1 expression) Anti-neuroinflammatory effect (reversion of β-amyloid-induced activation of astrocytes and microglia; decrease in TLR4, NF-κB expression) Anti-apoptotic (downregulation of proapoptotic markers—Bax, Caspase-3, PARP-1; up-regulation of anti-apoptotic marker—Bcl-2) Regulation of synaptic markers—increase in Syntaxin, SNAP-25, PSD-95, Syp, and SNAP-23 levels Alleviation of short-term memory dysfunction | [ |
| PC12 cells |
Antioxidant—induction of PKA, PI-3K, PGC-1α, and seladin-1 via ER- and TrkA-meditated pathways | [ |
| Wistar rats |
Improvement in learning and recognition memory Antioxidant (increase in glutathione and CAT, SOD, GRX, and GPX levels and decrease of lipid peroxidation) | [ |
| PC12 cells |
Decrease in Ca2+ level Antioxidantan increase in CAT, GSH-Px, and GRx levels Decrease in caspase-3 activity Maintenance of mitochondrial membrane potential Decrease in DNA damage | [ |
| Neuro-2A cells |
Inhibition of β-amyloid-induced autophagy Improved glucose utilization | [ |
| In silico |
Inhibition of cholinesterases—acetylcholinesterase (AChE), butyrylcholinesterase (BChE) Inhibition of β-secretase 1 (BACE 1) | [ |
| ICR female mice |
Antioxidant—activation of antioxidant enzymes—CAT, SOD | [ |
| Male albino Wistar rats |
Decrease in AChE activity Maintenance of mitochondrial membrane potential Antiapoptotic—decrease in Bax, caspase-3, 9 levels and increase in Bcl2 Antioxidant—increase in CAT, SOD, Gpx, GST activity | [ |
| Male C57BL/6 N mice |
Antioxidant—decreased production of ROS and increased antioxidant proteins Nrf2, HO-1 levels Anti-inflammatory—decreased expression of proinflammatory cytokines—TNF-α, IL-1β, p-NF-κB Antiapoptotic—decreased expression of p-JNK, Bax, and caspase-3 increased expression of Bcl-2 Enhanced synaptic integrity, cognition, and memory process | [ |
| Male adult Wistar rats |
Improved motor functions Attenuation of apoptosis by increased Bcl2 expression Attenuation of astrogliosis by a decrease in GFAP levels Decreased neuroinflammation by reduction of NF-κB levels | [ |
| Cortical cells |
Inhibition of NMDA-induced excitotoxicity caused by the excess of glutamate Protection against β-amyloid-induced neuronal damage | [ |
| C57/BL6 male mice |
Inhibition of astrocyte and microglial activation Anti-inflammatory—attenuation of production of iNOS, NO, IL-6, IL-1β | [ |
| SH-SY5Y cells |
Attenuation of apoptosis—decrease in caspase-3, -9 expression Antioxidant—increased levels of GSH, SOD, and expression of NRF2 and HO-1 | [ |
| Male albino mice |
Improved spatial learning and reference memory Maintenance of cholinergic neurotransmission Inhibition of AChE activity Antioxidant—increase in SOD and GSH levels Increased BDNF levels | [ |
| RAW 264.7 Cells |
Anti-inflammatory effect concerning inhibition of NF-κB and activation of Nrf2/HO-1—suppression of proinflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6, IL1β) and pro-inflammatory enzymes (iNOS, COX-2) expression | [ |
Collected studies of pure compounds suggesting antidiabetic activity of hesperidin and hesperetin.
| Hesperidin | ||
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| Rat skeletal muscle cell lines, L6 myoblasts |
Antioxidant—free radicals scavenging; increase in glutathione levels Increased glucose uptake—up-regulation of GLUT-4 receptors and down-regulation of PI3 kinase | [ |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats |
α-glucosidase inhibition | [ |
| In vitro |
Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibition | [ |
| In vitro—Caco-2/TC7 cells and |
Decrease in sugar absorption rate by inhibition of GLUT 2 and GLUT 5 transporters | [ |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats |
Regulation of glycolysis and gluconeogenesis—induction of glucokinase and decrease in glucose-6-phosphatase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase activity Improved insulin sensitivity by activating the IR/PDK1 pathway Improved glucose uptake | [ |
| Male Wistar rats |
Up-regulation of GLUT 4 translocation Anti-apoptotic effect—increase in antiapoptotic Bcl-2 protein and decrease in pro-apoptotic protein Bax levels Increased PPAR-γ expression | [ |
| In silico |
Glucose-dependent insulinotropic effect by PKA-dependent mode of action | [ |
| White male albino rats |
Reduction in oxidative stress—enhanced antioxidant enzymes (CAT, GPx, GR, SOD) levels Anti-inflammatory—suppression in the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines—TNF-α, IL-6 Decreased glucose, glycosylated hemoglobin, and increased insulin plasma levels | [ |
| Male Wistar albino rats |
Reduction in insulin, total cholesterol, triglyceride, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol serum levels Improved histological structure Anti-inflammatory—decreased pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF-α, IL-6) levels | [ |
| Retinal ganglion cell 5 (RGC-5) cells |
Antioxidant—enhancement in SOD, GPx, CAT activities Anti-apoptotic—stabilization of mitochondrial membrane potential, inhibition of caspase-3, -9, and Bax expression, enhancement in Bcl-2 expression, suppression in pro-apoptotic p38 and JNK MAPK pathways activation | [ |
| Male albino rats |
Decrease in fasting blood glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin levels Increase in insulin secretion—protective action on β-cells and stimulatory effect on the insulin secretory response of islets of the pancreas Decrease in gluconeogenic enzymes Anti-hyperglycemic—increased GLUT 4 expression | [ |
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| Rat skeletal muscle cell lines, L6 myoblasts |
Antioxidant—free radicals scavenging; increase in glutathione levels Increased glucose uptake—up-regulation of GLUT-4 receptors and down-regulation of PI3 kinase | [ |
| Male albino Wistar rats |
Reduction in glucose plasma and increase in insulin levels similar to glibenclamide Recuperation of pancreatic β-cells Improvement in glucokinase activity and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase Inhibition of hepatic gluconeogenesis—decrease in the level of gluconeogenic enzymes—glucose-6-phosphatase and fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase Increased glycogen content in hepatocytes Antioxidant—increase in activity of enzymic antioxidants Anti-hyperlipidemic effect—enhanced insulin secretion, which led to a reduction in cholesterol synthesis and due to the ability of hesperetin to bind bile acids, which resulted in a decrease in the cholesterol absorption Protective effect on hepatic damage Renoprotective effect | [ |
| Wistar rats |
Attenuation of gluconeogenesis by inhibition of mitochondrial pyruvate carrier, uncoupling of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation, inhibition of mitochondrial respiratory chain at Complex I, and deviation of NADH supply for gluconeogenesis and mitochondria due to a prooxidant action, deviation of glucose 6-phosphate for glucuronidation reactions | [ |
| Adult male Wistar albino rats |
Reduction of plasma glucose because of the increased release of insulin from the existing β-cells and/or regenerated β-cells of the pancreas, restored insulin sensitivity or inhibition of intestinal absorption of glucose, or enhanced the utilization of glucose by peripheral tissues Improved lipid profile Improved pancreatic islets’ morphology | [ |
| Male mice |
Anti-hyperglycemic—increased insulin production and reduced blood glucose levels | [ |
| Wistar rats |
Anti-hyperglycemic—decrease in glucose levels Antioxidant—increase in antioxidant enzymes—SOD, CAT, GSH, GPx activity Anti-inflammatory—decrease in pro-inflammatory cytokines levels—TNF-α, IL-17 Anti-apoptotic—suppression of caspase-3 and maintenance of mitochondrial membrane potential | [ |
| In vitro |
α-glucosidase inhibition | [ |
| In vitro |
Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 inhibition | [ |
| HepG2 cells |
Increase in protein level and direct activation of SIRT1, which was accompanied by induction of AMPK phosphorylation | [ |
| RAW264.7 cells |
Inhibitory effect on oxidative stress and inflammation induced by AGEs | [ |
| Male Sprague Dawley rats |
Up-regulation and Increased Glo-1 enzymatic activity Anti-inflammatory—decreased level of pro-inflammatory cytokines (IL-1β, TNF-α) Enhancement of Nrf2/ARE pathway | [ |