4.7 Review

Dietary Protective Potential of Fucoxanthin as an Active Food Component on Neurological Disorders

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 71, Issue 8, Pages 3599-3619

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.2c08249

Keywords

fucoxanthin; metabolism and bioavailability; brain targeting; dietary interventions; neurological disorders; neurotrophic supplement

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Fucoxanthin has preventive and therapeutic effects on neurological disorders by acting on multiple targets, such as regulating apoptosis, reducing oxidative stress, activating autophagy pathway, inhibiting protein aggregation, improving dopamine secretion, attenuating neuroinflammation, etc. Further research is needed to explore the metabolism and transport of fucoxanthin through the gut-brain process. Dietary supplementation of fucoxanthin is also suggested for prevention of neurological disorders.
The prevalence of neurodegenerative, cerebrovascular, and psychiatric diseases and other neurological disorders has increased dramatically worldwide. Fucoxanthin is an algal pigment with many biological functions, and there is rising evidence that fucoxanthin plays a preventive and therapeutic role in neurological disorders. This review focuses on the metabolism, bioavailability, and blood-brain barrier penetration of fucoxanthin. Furthermore, the neuroprotective potential of fucoxanthin in neurodegenerative diseases, cerebrovascular diseases, and psychiatric diseases as well as other neurological disorders such as epilepsy, neuropathic pain, and brain tumors by acting on multiple targets will be summarized. The multiple targets include regulating apoptosis, reducing oxidative stress, activating the autophagy pathway, inhibiting Afi aggregation, improving dopamine secretion, reducing alpha-synuclein aggregation, attenuating neuroinflammation, modulating gut microbiota, and activating brain-derived neurotrophic factor, etc. Additionally, we look forward to brain-targeted oral transport systems due to the low bioavailability and blood-brain barrier permeability of fucoxanthin. We also propose exploring the systemic mechanisms of fucoxanthin metabolism and transport through the gut-brain process and envision new therapeutic targets for fucoxanthin to act on the central nervous system. Finally, we propose dietary fucoxanthin delivery interventions to achieve preventive effects on neurological disorders. This review provides a reference for the application of fucoxanthin in the neural field.

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