4.7 Review

Recent Advances in Health Benefits of Stilbenoids

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 69, Issue 35, Pages 10036-10057

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.1c03699

Keywords

molecular targets; stilbenoids; resveratrol; pterostilbene; 3 '-hydroxypterostilbene

Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology [109-2320-B-002-012-MY3]

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Biological targeting is a key strategy in drug development, but single-target drug binding may lead to failure due to the multifactorial nature of disease pathogenesis. Naturally derived drugs have multitarget effects in disease prevention or therapeutic actions without off-target effects.
Biological targeting or molecular targeting is the main strategy in drug development and disease prevention. However, the problem of off-targets cannot be neglected. Naturally derived drugs are preferred over synthetic compounds in pharmaceutical markets, and the main goals are high effectiveness, lower cost, and fewer side effects. Single-target drug binding may be the major cause of failure, as the pathogenesis of diseases is predominantly multifactorial. Naturally derived drugs are advantageous because they are expected to have multitarget effects, but not off-targets, in disease prevention or therapeutic actions. The capability of phytochemicals to modulate molecular signals in numerous diseases has been widely discussed. Among them, stilbenoids, especially resveratrol, have been well-studied, along with their potential molecular targets, including AMPK, Sirt1, NF-kappa B, PKC, Nrf2, and PPARs. The analogues of resveratrol, pterostilbene, and hydroxylated-pterostilbene may have similar, if not more, potential biological targeting effects compared with their original counterpart. Furthermore, new targets that have been discussed in recent studies are reviewed in this paper.

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