4.7 Review

A Systematic Review on Marine Algae-Derived Fucoxanthin: An Update of Pharmacological Insights

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 20, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md20050279

Keywords

fucoxanthin; bioactivities; in vitro; in vivo; pharmacokinetics; safety and toxicity

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) through the Brain Pool Program [2021H1D3A2A01100053]
  2. National Research Foundation of Korea [2021H1D3A2A01100053] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Fucoxanthin, a natural antioxidant pigment found in marine algae, has potential benefits for human health and disease management. It has attracted significant attention from the scientific community but more clinical research is needed.
Fucoxanthin, belonging to the xanthophyll class of carotenoids, is a natural antioxidant pigment of marine algae, including brown macroalgae and diatoms. It represents 10% of the total carotenoids in nature. The plethora of scientific evidence supports the potential benefits of nutraceutical and pharmaceutical uses of fucoxanthin for boosting human health and disease management. Due to its unique chemical structure and action as a single compound with multi-targets of health effects, it has attracted mounting attention from the scientific community, resulting in an escalated number of scientific publications from January 2017 to February 2022. Fucoxanthin has remained the most popular option for anti-cancer and anti-tumor activity, followed by protection against inflammatory, oxidative stress-related, nervous system, obesity, hepatic, diabetic, kidney, cardiac, skin, respiratory and microbial diseases, in a variety of model systems. Despite much pharmacological evidence from in vitro and in vivo findings, fucoxanthin in clinical research is still not satisfactory, because only one clinical study on obesity management was reported in the last five years. Additionally, pharmacokinetics, safety, toxicity, functional stability, and clinical perspective of fucoxanthin are substantially addressed. Nevertheless, fucoxanthin and its derivatives are shown to be safe, non-toxic, and readily available upon administration. This review will provide pharmacological insights into fucoxanthin, underlying the diverse molecular mechanisms of health benefits. However, it requires more activity-oriented translational research in humans before it can be used as a multi-target drug.

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