| Literature DB >> 35889917 |
Maria Imperatrice1, Iris Cuijpers2, Freddy J Troost2, Mireille M J P E Sthijns2.
Abstract
The regulation of blood flow to peripheral muscles is crucial for proper skeletal muscle functioning and exercise performance. During exercise, increased mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation leads to increased electron leakage and consequently induces an increase in ROS formation, contributing to DNA, lipid, and protein damage. Moreover, exercise may increase blood- and intramuscular inflammatory factors leading to a deterioration in endurance performance. The aim of this review is to investigate the potential mechanisms through which the polyphenol hesperidin could lead to enhanced exercise performance, namely improved endothelial function, reduced exercise-induced oxidative stress, and inflammation. We selected in vivo RCTs, animal studies, and in vitro studies in which hesperidin, its aglycone form hesperetin, hesperetin-metabolites, or orange juice are supplemented at any dosage and where the parameters related to endothelial function, oxidative stress, and/or inflammation have been measured. The results collected in this review show that hesperidin improves endothelial function (via increased NO availability), inhibits ROS production, decreases production and plasma levels of pro-inflammatory markers, and improves anaerobic exercise outcomes (e.g., power, speed, energy). For elite and recreational athletes, hesperidin could be used as an ergogenic aid to enhance muscle recovery between training sessions, optimize oxygen and nutrient supplies to the muscles, and improve anaerobic performance.Entities:
Keywords: antioxidant; citrus flavanones; endothelial dysfunction; ergogenic aids; exercise performance; hesperidin; physical activity; polyphenols
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35889917 PMCID: PMC9316530 DOI: 10.3390/nu14142955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 6.706
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin, hesperetin, and their metabolites on endothelial function markers in studies performed in vitro.
| Author, | Cell Type | Treatment | Treatment | Endothelial Function Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| BAEC | Hesperetin | 10 min | ↑pAMPK protein levels (1 μM, 10 μM) |
| 1 h | ↑NO production (10 μΜ) | |||
| ↓TNF-α-stimulated VCAM-1 protein levels (10 μM) | ||||
|
| HUVECs | Hesperetin, HPT7G | 24 h | ↑Release of NO, in a dose-dependent manner |
|
| HUVECs | Hesperetin | 24 h | ↑Release of NO in a dose-dependent manner |
| ↑eNOS mRNA expression (50 μM) | ||||
|
| HUVECs | Hesperidin | 30 min prior to strain treatment (computer-controlled application of sinusoidal negative pressure) | ↓strain-induced ET-1 secretion (10 µM, 100 µM) |
| 30 min | ↑NO production (100 µM) | |||
| 60 min | ↑NO production (10 µM, 100 µM) | |||
|
| HUVECs | Hesperetin, HPT3′G, HPT3′S, HPT7G | 24 h | ↓TNF-α-stimulated monocyte adhesion |
|
| HUVECs | Hesperidin, hesperidin methyl chalone | 24 h | ↓TNF-α-stimulated VCAM-1 protein expression (5 µM, 10 µM, 50 µM) |
| ↓TNF-α-stimulated monocyte adhesion (5 µM, 10 µM, 50 µM) |
↑: statistically significant increase; ↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change. Abbreviations: BAEC = bovine aortic endothelial cells; HUVECs = human umbilical vein endothelial cells; (p)AMPK = (phosphorylated) 5′AMP-activated protein kinase; (p)Akt = (phosphorylated) protein kinase B; (p)-Enos = (phosphorylated) endothelial nitric oxide synthase; NO = nitric oxide; TNF-α = tumour necrosis factor-α; VCAM-1 = vascular cell adhesion molecule 1; ICAM-1 = intracellular adhesion molecule 1; HPT7G = hesperetin-7-O-glucuronide; HPTG’3 = hesperetin-3′-O-glucuronide; HPT′3S = hesperetin-3′-O-sulphate; ET-1 = endothelin-1.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin, hesperetin, or metabolites on endothelial function markers in animal studies.
| Author, | Sample | Intervention | Intervention | Endothelial Function Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats with hypertension | Hesperidin, | 5 weeks | ↓SBP, DBP |
|
| Male SHRs | Hesperetin, HPT7G, HPT3′G | 3 min | ↓SBP (hesperetin, HPT7G) |
|
| Thoracic aortic rings from SHRs and WKY rats | HPT7G | 20 min |
↑: statistically significant increase; ↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change. Abbreviations: L-NAME = Nω-nitro L-arginine methyl ester; SBP = systolic blood pressure; DBP = diastolic blood pressure; Nox = nitric oxide metabolites; SHRs = spontaneously hypertensive rats; HPT7G = hesperetin-7-O-glucuronide; HPTG’3 = hesperetin-3′-O-glucuronide; WKY = Wistar Kyoto; Ach = acetylcholine; SNP = sodium nitroprusside.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin on endothelial function markers in human studies.
| Author, | Sample | Intervention | Intervention | Endothelial Function Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| n = 24 healthy males | 292 mg hesperidin/day | Acute (6 h before test) | |
| Chronic (4 weeks) | ↓DBP | |||
|
| n = 159 subjects with pre- or stage 1 hypertension | 600 mg hesperidin/day | Acute (6 h before test) | ↑IRH |
| Chronic (12 weeks) | ↑IRH | |||
|
| n = 10 healthy female subjects | 17 mg or 170 mg hesperidin | Acute (test within 70 min after intake) | ↓drop in blood flow |
|
| n = 16 men at moderate CVD riskAge = 60.6 (8.4) y | 320 mg hesperidin | Acute (5 h before test) | =P-selectin expression |
|
| n = 21 with increased cardiovascular risk | 159.5 mg/day hesperidin | Chronic (7 days) | ↑FMD |
|
| n = 24 with MetS | 500 mg/day hesperidin | Chronic (3 weeks) | ↑FMD |
|
| n = 48 subjects with baseline FMD ≥3% | 450 mg/day hesperidin | Chronic (6 weeks) | ↑FMD |
|
| n = 49 subjects | 1 g/day hesperidin | Chronic (12 weeks) | ↓SBP |
↑: statistically significant increase; ↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; data are presented as mean ± SD or as a range. Abbreviations: Aus = arbitrary units (log); BMI = body max index (kg/m2); BRS = baroreflex sensitivity; BP = blood pressure; CON = control; DBP = diastolic blood pressure; FDM = flow-mediated dilation; INT = intervention; IRH = ischaemic reactive hyperaemia; MetS = metabolic syndrome; Nox = nitric oxide metabolites; RCT = randomized controlled trial; SBP = systolic blood pressure; sICAM-1 = soluble intercellular adhesion molecule 1; sVCAM-1 = soluble vascular cell adhesion molecule 1.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin, hesperetin and their metabolites on oxidative stress markers in studies performed in vitro.
| Author, | Cell Type | Radical Scavenging Activity Assay | Treatment | Treatment | Oxidative Stress Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Human erythrocytes | Hesperidin, | Assay-dependent | =free radical scavenging activity compared to ascorbic acid and trolox, in a dose-dependent manner | |
| 30 min | ↓H2O2-induced TBARS production, in a dose-dependent manner | ||||
|
| YPEN-1 prostatic endothelial cells | ONOO−, | Hesperetin | 2 h | =ONOO− and ·O2− scavenging activity compared to penicillamine and Trolox, respectively |
|
| HUVECs | Hesperidin, | 1 h exposure in the presence of strain treatment (computer-controlled application of sinusoidal negative pressure) | = strain-increased ROS formation (1 µM) | |
|
| L02 hepatic cells | Hesperidin | 24 h | = | |
|
| Macrophage RAW264.7 cells and fibroblast A7r5 cells | Hesperetin, | 60 min for RAW264.7 cells | ↓LPS-induced intracellular ROS level (1 μM, 5 μM, 10 μM) |
↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; Abbreviations: HUVECs = human umbilical vein endothelial cells; ROS = reactive oxygen species; ABTS = 2,2′-azino-bis(3-ethylbenzothiazoline-6-sulfonic acid; H2O2 = hydrogen peroxide; TBARS = thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances; ·OH = hydroxyl radical; ONOO− = peroxynitrite;·O2− = superoxide anion;·NO = nitric oxide; t-BHP = tert-butylhydroperoxide; MDA = malondialdehyde.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin on oxidative stress markers in animal studies.
| Author, | Sample | Intervention | Intervention Duration | Oxidative Stress Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Groups of Female Wister rats: | 200 mg/kg of hesperidin three times per week | 5 weeks | ↓ROS production by peritoneal macrophages induced by the exhaustion test |
|
| Brain tissue from male Swiss albino rats | Hesperidin 200 mg/kg/day | 28 days | =MDA content |
|
| Kidney tissue from male Wistar rats | Hesperidin | 10 days | =ROS levels |
|
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats with hypertension | Hesperidin | 5 weeks | ↓vascular superoxide production (15, 30 mg/kg/day) |
↑: statistically significant increase; ↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; Abbreviations: L-NAME = Nω-nitro L-arginine methyl ester; MDA = malondialdehyde; ROS = reactive oxygen species; CAT = catalase; SOD = superoxide dismutase; GPx = glutathione peroxidase; GSH = glutathione; GST = glutathione S-transferase; TBARS = thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances; GR = glutathione reductase.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin on oxidative stress following physical exercise.
| Author, | Sample | Intervention | Intervention | Exercise Test | Exercise-Induced Oxidative Stress Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| n = 15 male amateur cyclists | 500 mg hesperidin | Acute | Repeated sprints test (Wingate test) | =TBARS |
|
| n = 11 healthy soccer players | INT: 217 mg hesperidin | Acute (2.5 h before the test) | Yo-Yo Intermittent Recovery Test (YYIRT) | =TAS |
↑: statistically significant increase; ↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; Abbreviations: BMI = body max index; CAT = catalase; CON = control; GSH = glutathione; INT = intervention; MDA = malondialdehyde; MET = metabolic equivalent; RCT = randomized controlled trial; SOD = Superoxide dismutase; TAS = total antioxidant status; TBARS = thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances; Data are presented as mean ± SD or as a range.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin and hesperetin on inflammatory markers in studies performed in vitro.
| Author, | Cell Type | Treatment | Treatment Duration | Inflammatory Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Macrophage RAW264.7 cells | HPT7G | 24 h | =LPS-induced NO production (3.13, 6.25 µg/mL) |
|
| Macrophage RAW264.7 cells and fibroblast A7r5 cells | Hesperetin, | 18 h exposure for RAW264.7 cells | ↓LPS-induced PGE2 production (1 μM, 5 μM, 10 μM in both cell types) |
|
| Macrophage RAW264.7 cells | Hesperidin | 30 min | =LPS-induced PGE2 production (10 μM) |
|
| Macrophage RAW264.7 cells | Hesperidin | 24 h | =LPS-induced NO production (5 μg/mL) |
↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; Abbreviations: HPT7G = hesperetin-7-O-glucopyranoside; LPS = lipopolysaccharides; NO = nitric oxide; IL-6 = interleukin-6; IL-1β = interleukin-1beta; TNF-α = tumour necrosis factor-alpha; COX-2 = cyclo-oxygenase 2; PGE2 = prostaglandin E2; NO2 = nitrogen dioxide; iNOS = nitric oxide synthase; NF-κB = nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin on inflammatory markers in animal studies.
| Author, | Sample | Intervention | Intervention Duration | Inflammatory Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Female BALB/c and C57L/6 mice | Hesperidin, | 3 h before LPS treatment | ↓LPS-induced increase in plasma TNF-α (0.3 mg, 1 mg, 3 mg/mouse) |
|
| Male Wistar rats | Hesperidin | 10 days | =renal TNF-α (200 mg/kg/day) |
|
| Male Sprague–Dawley rats with hypertension (treated with L-NAME) | Hesperidin | 5 weeks | ↓plasma TNF-α (15, 30 mg/kg/day) |
↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; Abbreviations: LPS = lipopolysaccharides; TNF-α = tumour necrosis factor-alpha; L-NAME = Nω-nitro L-arginine methyl ester.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin on inflammatory markers in human studies.
| Author, | Subject | Intervention | Intervention | Inflammatory Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| n = 21 subjects with increased cardiovascular risk | 159.5 mg/day hesperidin | 7 days | ↓hs-CRP |
|
| n = 49 subjects | 1 g/day hesperidin | 12 weeks | ↓TNF-α |
|
| n = 19 subjects | 3 g/day hesperidin | 12 weeks | ↓CRP |
|
| n = 24 healthy males | 292 mg/day hesperidin | 4 weeks | =CRP |
↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; Abbreviations: BMI = body max index (kg/m2); CON = control; CRP = C-reactive protein hs-CRP = high-sensitivity C-reactive protein; IL-6 = interleukin-6; INT = intervention; MetS = metabolic syndrome; RCT = randomized controlled trial; TNF-α = tumour necrosis factor-alpha. Data are presented as mean ± SD or as a range.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin on exercise performance outcomes in animal studies.
| Author, | Sample | Intervention | Intervention | Exercise Test | Exercise Performance Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Female Wistar rats | 200 mg/kg of hesperidin three times per week | Chronic (5 weeks) | Maximum distance run until exhaustion test (2 times per week for 5 weeks) | ↑ maximum distance during all performed tests (week 1–5) |
↑: statistically significant increase.
Studies investigating the effects of hesperidin on exercise performance outcomes in human studies.
| Author, | Sample Characteristics | Intervention | Intervention | Exercise Test | Exercise Performance Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| n = 15 male amateur cyclists | 500 mg hesperidin | Acute | Repeated sprints test (Wingate test) | ↑Average power |
|
| n = 11 healthy soccer players | 217 mg hesperidin | Acute 2.5 h before the test) | Yo-Yo intermittent recovery test (YYIRT) | =VO2max (increasing trend) |
|
| n = 39 trained males Age = 18–25 y | 500 mg/day citrus fruit extract (450 mg hesperidin/day) | Chronic (4 weeks) | 10 min time-trial on a cycle ergometer | ↑Δ Power |
|
| n = 40 male amateur cyclists | 500 mg/day hesperidin | Chronic (8 weeks) | Repeated sprints test (Wingate test) | ↑Absolute peak power |
| Incremental test until exhaustion | ↑ Maximum power | ||||
|
| n = 92 moderately trained healthy subjects | 360 mg or 450 mg hesperidin | Chronic (4 and 8 weeks) | Wingate anaerobic test | ↑Average power (360 mg after 4 weeks) |
↑: statistically significant increase; ↓: statistically significant decrease; = no significant change; Abbreviations: BMI = body max index; CON = control; Es VO2max = Estimated VO2max; FTP = functional threshold power; INT = intervention; MET = metabolic equivalent; RCT = randomized controlled trial; RPE = Ratings of Perceived Exertion; VO2max = maximal oxygen uptake; Data are presented as mean ± SD or as a range.
Figure 1Schematic summary of the potential mechanism of action for the hesperidin effect on endothelial function during exercise. (A) During exercise, the release of nitric oxide (NO) by endothelial cells causes the relaxation of the smooth muscle cells, which leads to the dilation of an artery and an increase in blood flow. (B) Hesperidin increases the endothelial cells’ NO production. This process leads to higher artery dilation, which further improves blood flow. During exercise, improved skeletal muscle perfusion and the consequent increase in oxygen (O2) efflux to the muscle can improve endurance performance. The figure was created with BioRender.com. Abbreviations: HES = hesperidin; NO = nitric oxide; O2 = oxygen; SKM = skeletal muscle; Increased: ↑ < ↑↑; Decreased ↓ < ↓↓.
Figure 2Schematic summary of potential mechanism of action for the hesperidin effect on exercise-induced oxidative stress. (A) Contractile activity of skeletal muscle tissue leading to a higher oxygen demand could induce an increased formation of ROS as a result of the excessive mitochondrial activity leading to incomplete oxidative phosphorylation during exercise. In athletes performing extreme endurance exercise, the constant rise in ROS production could lead to damage to DNA, lipids (lipid peroxidation), or protein and attenuation in muscle contraction. (B) Increased blood flow (and thereby increased shear stress) during exercise leads to increased endothelial ROS production, which reacts with NO. Increased ROS production by the endothelium leads to decreased NO availability. (C) Hesperidin, acting as an antioxidant, helps to prevent the side effects of excessive ROS formation in the muscle cells. Moreover, hesperidin increases endogenous antioxidant enzymes. These two mechanisms combined help prevent cell damage and the decline in muscle contraction signalling pathways leading to stimulation in force production. (D) When supplemented with hesperidin, endothelial ROS production will be decreased, preventing the decrease in NO production caused by shear stress. The figure was created with BioRender.com. Abbreviations: HES = hesperidin; NO = nitric oxide; NOX = NADPH oxidase; O2 = oxygen; ROS = reactive oxygen species; Increased: ↑; Decreased: ↓.
Figure 3Schematic summary of potential mechanism of action for the hesperidin effect on exercise-induced inflammation. (A) Exhaustive exercise leads to macrophage activation, which activates an acute inflammatory response characterized by increases in circulatory and intramuscular inflammatory markers such as C-reactive protein (CRP), cytokines (tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), interleukin-6 (IL-6), and interleukin-1beta (IL-1β). Without adequate post-exercise/competition recovery periods, an excessive inflammatory response could lead to impaired muscle contractions and force generation. (B) Hesperidin shows the potential to inhibit macrophage activation and recruitment and decrease markers of exercise-induced inflammation, potentially speeding up the recovery process and, therefore, improving exercise performance. The figure was created with BioRender.com. Abbreviations: CRP = C-reactive protein; HES = hesperidin; IL-1β = interleukin-1beta; IL-6 = interleukin-6; TNF-α = tumour necrosis factor-alpha; Increased: ↑; Decreased: ↓.