| Literature DB >> 35877738 |
Tharuka Gunathilake1, Taiwo O Akanbi2, Hafiz A R Suleria3, Tim D Nalder1, David S Francis1, Colin J Barrow1.
Abstract
Driven by consumer demand and government policies, synthetic additives in aquafeed require substitution with sustainable and natural alternatives. Seaweeds have been shown to be a sustainable marine source of novel bioactive phenolic compounds that can be used in food, animal and aqua feeds, or microencapsulation applications. For example, phlorotannins are a structurally unique polymeric phenolic group exclusively found in brown seaweed that act through multiple antioxidant mechanisms. Seaweed phenolics show high affinities for binding proteins via covalent and non-covalent bonds and can have specific bioactivities due to their structures and associated physicochemical properties. Their ability to act as protein cross-linkers means they can be used to enhance the rheological and mechanical properties of food-grade delivery systems, such as microencapsulation, which is a new area of investigation illustrating the versatility of seaweed phenolics. Here we review how seaweed phenolics can be used in a range of applications, with reference to their bioactivity and structural properties.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; aquafeed; cross-linker; extraction and characterisation; phenolics; seaweed; veterinary drug
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35877738 PMCID: PMC9319038 DOI: 10.3390/md20070445
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mar Drugs ISSN: 1660-3397 Impact factor: 6.085
Figure 1Schematic representation of seaweed phenolic compounds and their potential application as natural aquafeed additive with the intended benefits.
Figure 2Seaweed thallus structures for (a) brown seaweed (e.g., Lessoniaceae), (b) green seaweed (e.g., Caulerpaceae) and (c) red seaweed (e.g., Galaxauraceae).
Figure 3The basic skeleton of flavonoid compounds. A & B; phenyl rings and C; heterocyclic pyran ring.
Figure 4The basic skeleton of hydroxybenzoic acids and hydroxycinnamic acids found in seaweed.
Figure 5Structures of major flavonoids identified in seaweeds.
Figure 6Examples for linear and branched phlorotannin (e.g., Tetrafucol).
Figure 7Phlorotannins classification based on type of linkage between aromatic units, (a) phlorethol and fuhalol, (b) fucol, (c) fucophlorethol, (d) eckol and carmalol.
Antibiotic and antimicrobial properties of seaweed phenolic compounds against common pathogens found in aquaculture.
| Seaweed Species | Seaweed Extract | Polyphenol Content/ | Pathogenic Species | Antibiotic and Antimicrobial Properties | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethanolic and aqueous extract (250 mg/L). | TPC; 5.2 mg GAE/g, and 2.8 mg GAE/g in ethanolic extract (Folin–Ciocalteu Assay) |
| Antibacterial activity | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | Antimicrobial activity; | [ | |||
| Crude acetone-water seaweed extracts and purified (SPE) methanol-water seaweed fraction | TPC; 17% DWfraction in crude extract and 1.45% DWseaweeds after SPE extract |
| Antibacterial activity; | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract | TPC; 180 mg GAE/g DW | Antibacterial activity | [ | ||
| Ethanolic extract fraction | Low molecular weight phlorotannins (LMPs) | Antibacterial property | [ | ||
| Crude extract (CE) and phlorotannin-enriched ethyl acetate fraction (EPE). | Phlorotannins; Eckol (5.23 mg/g) and dieckol (1.67 mg/g) (HPLC/MS-TOF) | EPE bactericidal activity 4.6-fold higher than CE. | [ | ||
| 50% seaweed biomass-added to fish feed | TPC; max 52.55 ± 0.01 mg GAE/g DW in algal biomass | Fed to | Skin pigmentation, | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate fraction (EAF) | Presence of tannin, steroid, phenolic, alkaloid and terpenoid compounds in EAF | Antimicrobial activity | [ | ||
| Purified ethanolic fraction of seaweed | TPC; 18.42 mg/g GAE and 14. 71 mg/g GAE | Antibiotic activity | [ | ||
| Purified ethanolic fraction | Low molecular weight phlorotannin (LMPs); 900 μg/mL |
| Antibacterial activity | [ |
TPC—Total Phenolic Content, TFC—Total Flavonoid Content, GAE—Gallic acid equivalence, QE—Quercetin equivalence, SPE—Solid Phase Extraction, DW—Dry Weight. Search keywords: seaweed phenolics, phlorotannins, bioactivity, antibacterial, antifungal, antimicrobial, aquaculture pathogens, shrimp pathogen; Years of searching: 2010–2022
Antimicrobial properties of seaweed phenolic compounds against foodborne pathogens.
| Seaweed Species | Seaweed Extract | Polyphenol Content/Active Compounds | Antimicrobial Properties | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phlorotannin extracts | TPC, | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
| Dried methanolic extracts | TPC; 151.3 mg GAE/g | Antimicrobial activity against | [ | |
| Polyphenol extract | NA | Antibacterial activity against antibiotic resistant | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | TPC; 43.72 and 35.98 mg GAE/g extract | Antibacterial activities against | [ | |
| Chloroform extract | TPC; 3.598 mg/g and TFC; ~0.15 mg/g | Antifungal activity against | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate fraction | TPC; 8.98 GAE/g | Antifungal activity against | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract | TPC; 18.79 mg GAE/g | Antimicrobial activity against | [ |
NA—Not available, TPC—Total Phenolic Content, TFC—Total Flavonoid Content, GAE—Gallic acid equivalence, QE—Quercetin equivalence, CE—Catechin equivalents, PGE—Phloroglucinol equivalents, DW—Dry Weight. Search keywords: seaweed phenolics, phlorotannins, bioactivity, antibacterial, antifungal, antimicrobial, foodborne pathogens, food spoilage pathogens; Years of searching: 2010–2022.
Seaweed phenolics as potential veterinary medicine in clinical studies.
| Seaweed Species | Seaweed Extract | Polyphenol Content/ | Tested Species/Cell Line | Dosage | Therapeutic Properties | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ethyl acetate | Phlorofucofuroeckol A and dioxinodehydroeckol | RAW 264.7 murine macrophages cells | >10 µg/mL | Cytotoxicity | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate fraction | TPhC; 619 PGE mg/g (eckol-type phlorotannins) | Neuronal | 100 µg/mL | Neuroprotective activity against the neurotoxic amyloid β protein (Aβ1–42) | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | TPC; 55.04 mg GAE/g of extract | MCF-7 & | 25.14 µg/mL and 65 µg/mL | Cytotoxicity | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract | High molecular weight fraction | HT-29 cell culture | 250 μg/mL | Effect of simulated gastrointestinal digestion and fermentation | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | TPC; 78.95 ± 4.33 mg GAE/ 100 g | MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cell lines | 22 μg/mL and 55 μg/mL | Antioxidant, Antiproliferative, and Antiangiogenesis Effects | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract | NA | virulent strain of | MIC; 90 µg/mL | Immunostimulant | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract | NA | RAW 264.7 murine macrophage cell line | 200 µg/mL | Anti-inflammatory activity | [ | |
| Methanol-chloroform extract | Phlorotannins (eckol, 8,8′-bieckol, phlorofucofuroeckol (PFF)- | ICR mice | 0.1 mg/mouse | Anti-allergic and anti-inflammatory | [ | |
| NA | NA | Commercially purchased Dieckol | Rats | 20 mg/kg bwt | Anticancer, anti-inflammatory, and anti-cell proliferative effects | [ |
| Ethyl acetate fraction | Trifuhalol A | RAW 264.7 cells | Hyaluronidase inhibitory activity (200–1000 µg/mL) | Anti-inflammatory Activity | [ | |
| Phlorotannin-rich extract | Dieckol | Mice | 50– | Prevent lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced septic shock | [ |
NA—Not available, TPC—Total Phenolic Content, TPhC—Total Phlorotannin Content, GAE—Gallic acid equivalence, PGE—Phloroglucinol equivalents, DW—Dry Weight. Search keywords: seaweed phenolics, phlorotannins, bioactivity, veterinary medicine, aquaculture, therapeutic, cytotoxicity, anti-Inflammatory, immunostimulant, neuroprotective, clinical studies; Years of searching: 2010–2022
Figure 8The general autooxidation process of polyunsaturated fatty acid.
Figure 9Formation of phenoxyl radical and resonance stabilization; the curved arrows represent the direction of the flow of single electrons.
Antioxidant properties of seaweed phenolic compounds.
| Seaweed Species | Tested Sample | Phenolic Content/Active Compounds | In Vitro Antioxidant Activities | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aqueous extracts | High levels of caffeic and gentisic acid and relatively high levels of gallic and vanillic acid | DPPH, RAP, | Preserving fish oil | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | TPC; 0.616 g/g GE | DPPH, Inhibition of lipid peroxidation, nitric oxide radical scavenging activity, hydrogen peroxide scavenging activity, RAP | Food preservative and therapeutic agent for oxidative stress-related disorders | [ | |
| Aqueous extract | TPhC (FVE); 1.15 g PGE/100 g extract | ABTS, DPPH, ORAC and FRAP | Oil stabilizers in canola oil (500 ppm seaweed extract > 50 ppm BHT) | [ | |
| Seaweed extract | TPhC; 4.4 g (PGE) 100 g−1 (DW) | FRAP, ORAC | Natural antioxidant and | [ | |
| Aqueous seaweed extracts | TPC; 0.26 and 0.30 g PGE/g | ORAC, DPPH, FCA, ABTS, CAA | Antioxidant potential of | [ | |
| SWE + IL extract | TPC; 39.55 mg PGE/g DW | DPPH, ABTS, TAC, FRAP | NA | [ | |
| Methanol/water extracts | TPC; 41.4 gPEGkg−1 DM | DPPH, FRAP, inhibition of copper-catalyzed LDL oxidation | NA | [ | |
| Organic extract (methanol and acetone) and aqueous extract | TPC; 2.0–2.5 g PGE 100 g−1 | DPPH, Reduction of power | Antioxidant nutraceuticals | [ | |
| Ethanol/water extract | FRAP, ORAC, DPPH | Food and pharmaceutical applications | [ | ||
| Ethyl acetate fraction | TPC; 205.5 mg GAE/g | DPPH, ABTS, FCA, H2O2 scavenging activity, lipid peroxidation inhibitory activity | Food preservative | [ | |
| Ethanol/water extract | TPC; 21.42 g PGE/100 g extract | DPPH | NA | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | TPC; 42.85 mg PGE/g DW | TEAC, FRAP | Natural antioxidants | [ | |
| Hot water extract | TPC; 2.4 mg GAE/g DW | DPPH | Functional food ingredient | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | TPC; 2.07 mg catechin/g DW | ABTS, DPPH, RAP | NA | [ | |
| Hot water extracts | TPC; 551.1 mg GAE/100 g DW | ABTS, FRAP | Natural antioxidant | [ | |
| Dichloromethane fraction from crude methanolic extract | TPC; 17.30 mg GAE/g of fraction | DPPH | NA | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract in SC-CO2 | TPC; 0.64 ± 0.02 mg GAE/g | DPPH, ABTS | Natural antioxidant | [ | |
| 70% acetone extract | TPC; 24.2 g PGE/100 g extract | DPPH, ORAC | Natural antioxidants for functional foods and nutraceuticals | [ | |
| Hydroethanolic methanolic and extracts | TPC; 4.8% of DW | DPPH, RAP | NA | [ | |
| Methanolic extract | TPC; 38.95 PGE% | DPPH | NA | [ | |
| Ethanol/water extract | TPC; 37.41 mg GAE/g DW | DPPH, ABTS | NA | [ | |
| Dichloromethane extract | TPC; 197 ± 16 mg GAE/g extract | DPPH, ABTS | Medicine, dietary supplements, cosmetics, and food industries. | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate | TPC; 40.583 GAE; µg mg−1 DW | DPPH | Natural antioxidant | [ | |
| 60% methanolic extract | TPC; 286.0 mg GAE/g | DPPH, FRAP, FCA, inhibition of lipid peroxidation, hydrogen peroxide scavenging activity | Natural food preservative or nutraceutical | [ | |
| Ethanol/water extract | TPC; 548.33 mg AG/100 g seaweed. | DPPH | NA | [ | |
| 1% Formic acid extracts | TPC; 40 mg (100 g)−1 GAE | DPPH, ABTS | NA | [ | |
| Ethanolic extract | TPC; 26.23 mg GAE/g seaweed | ABTS, TAA | NA | [ | |
| Aqueous extract | TPC; 200.5 mg (GAE)/100 g DW | DPPH, TAA | Medicinal foods or therapeutics | [ | |
| Ethyl acetate fractions | TPC; 88.48 mg PGE/100 mg extract. | DRSA, FRAP | Marine antioxidants | [ | |
| 75% ( | TPC; 100 mg/ (PEG/g) DW | DPPH | NA | [ |
NA—Not available, TPC—Total phenolic content, TFC—Total flavonoid content, TPhC—Total phlorotannin content, GAE—Gallic acid equivalence, CE—Catechin equivalents, PGE—Phloroglucinol equivalents, DW—Dry Weight, ABTS—radical cation decoloration, DPPH—free radical scavenging activity, FRAP—Ferric reducing antioxidant power assay, ORAC—Oxygen radical absorbance capacity, FCA—Ferrous ion chelating ability, CAA—Cellular antioxidant activity, TAC—Total antioxidant capacity, RAP—Reducing activity power, TAA—Total antioxidant activity, TEAC—Trolox equivalent antioxidant capacity, DRSA—DPPH radical-scavenging activity, LMW—Low molecular weight. Search keywords: seaweed phenolics, phlorotannins, antioxidant activity, DPPH, FRAP, TAA, ABTS, food preservative, fish oil stability; years of searching: 2000–2022.
Figure 10Structural characteristics of the flavonoid responsible for the high radical scavenging potency.
Cross-linking properties of phenolic compounds and their properties in protein–polyphenol complex (e.g., microencapsulation, hydrogels, emulsions).
| Phenolic Compound | Biopolymers | Morphological Characteristics | Physiochemical Characteristics | Application | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tannic acid | Gelatin-high methyl pectin | Rough and irregular shape, | Improved melting and gelling points, thermal stability, | Peppermint | [ |
| Caffeic, | Gelatin-pectin | NA | Reduced swelling, fewer free amino groups, | Gelatin-pectin | [ |
| Tannic acid–oxidized and non-oxidized form | Fish gelatin-gum arabic | NA | Improved gelling ability and mechanical properties | Complex coacervate gel | [ |
| Tannic acid | Sodium caseinate | NA | Altered secondary structure of SC, | Complex coacervate gel | [ |
| Caffeic, | Gelatin | NA | Decreased | Gelatin film (Insoluble hydrogels) | [ |
| Tannic acid | Gelatin–gum arabic | Spherical in shape, mean cluster size 116.80 μm | High encapsulation efficiency (84%), | Allyl | [ |
| Gelatin | Compact surface | Thermal stability, | Gelatin hydrogels | [ | |
| Tannic acid-oxidized form | Gelatin-flaxseed mucilage | Fine to less firm structure | High encapsulation efficacy (>90% | Flaxseed oil encapsulation | [ |
| Ferulic acid, | Gelatin | Smooth | High mechanical strength, | Gelatin film | [ |
| Tea polyphenol (Catechin, | Milk | NA | Structural stabilization via an increase in β-sheet | Milk β-lactoglobulin complexes | [ |
NA—Not available; TPC—Total phenolic content. Search keywords: seaweeds, phenolics, phlorotannins, cross-linker, binder, microcaps, encapsulation; hydrogel, biopolymers; Years of searching: 2000–2022.
Figure 11Protein and polyphenol interactions (cross-links) via non-covalent bonds (a) bidentate hydrogen bond (b) hydrogen bond (c) hydrophobic bond (d) ionic bond.
Figure 12Protein and polyphenol (oxidized form) interactions via covalent bonds.