Antidepressant-like Effect of Flavonoids: History
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Depressive disorders are among the most disabling diseases experienced around the world. The search for new pharmacological alternatives to treat depression is a global priority. In preclinical research, molecules obtained from plants, such as flavonoids, have shown promising antidepressant-like properties through several mechanisms of action that have not been fully elucidated, including crossing of the blood brain barrier (BBB). 

  • depression
  • flavonoid
  • serotonin
  • BDNF
  • polyphenol

1. Searching for Alternatives to Antidepressant Drugs

Despite the great advances in pharmacological research on antidepressant drugs, even during the latency period with new treatments patients continue suffering from depressive symptoms and some even drop out of treatment [92]. In addition, some patients have an increased risk of suicide during the first week of pharmacological treatment [93]. These characteristics drive the search for new active compounds with faster effects such as probiotics [94] or ketamine, whose effects are related to rapid molecular neuroplasticity; however, their clinical use is unfortunately limited by its poor safety and development of pharmacological tolerability [95,96]. As a consequence, the identification, evaluation, and development of new antidepressant substances with improved efficacy and apparently fewer side effects has become the main objective of numerous studies [16].
In this sense, the study of phytochemical compounds, such as flavonoids, is a growing field in neuropharmacology research [97,98], especially due to their impact on the CNS, including their potential antidepressant-like effects [16,99,100].

2. Pharmacokinetics of Flavonoids and Their Entry into the CNS

Most flavonoids are present in food in their O-glycoside form, with glucose being the most common β-linked residue, but glucoramnose, galactose, arabinose, and rhamnose are also present [150]. Once they are ingested and before entering the general circulation, these glycosides can undergo deglycosylation (hydrolysis), which takes place in either the small or large intestines depending on the type of sugar [104]. This process is carried out by two β-glucosidase enzymes: lactase-phlorizin hydrolase, which hydrolyzes lactose, glucose, and galactose, and cytosolic β-glycosidase, which has specificity dependent on the aglycone moiety [151]. The next step is the passive diffusion of the flavonoid aglycones through epithelial cells [152]. In this sense, isoflavones are the most efficiently absorbed, while flavanols and flavanones are intermediately absorbed, and proanthocyanins and anthocyanins are poorly absorbed [153].
After absorption, flavonoids are transported to the liver for further metabolism through different conjugation reactions such as O-methylation, sulfation, and glucuronidation. Due to flavonoids having a high conjugation capacity, their concentration in plasma is generally low [150]. These metabolites can also undergo oxidative metabolism mediated by cytochrome P450 enzymes. Likewise, metabolism can be carried out through bacteria in the colon, which hydrolyzes the parent, and in the upper part of the intestine unmetabolized flavonoids as well as their glucuronides and sulfates can be found. Some research has reported that conjugation reactions with glucuronic acid and/or sulfate are the most common for flavonoids. Finally, because of the metabolism of flavonoids, more hydrophilic compounds are obtained and hence eliminated through different routes. In the case of flavonoids, elimination in the bile is quantitatively the most important elimination route [104].
On the other hand, despite some research showing that diets rich in flavonoids have various therapeutic effects both at the systemic level and in the CNS [154,155,156,157], most studies have reported the presence of these compounds and their metabolites at the peripheral level, but little has been explored with respect to their bioavailability in the brain and the mechanisms that facilitate their transport through the blood–brain barrier (BBB) [158].
Epicatechin (a flavanol found mostly in cocoa and green tea) and its methylated form (3′-O-methyl epicatechin) were found in the brains of rats after (1, 5, and 10 days) its oral administration (100 mg/kg body weight/d) [159]. The capacity of epicatechin and its metabolite to cross the BBB in an in vitro model hCMEC/D3c cell culture has also been evaluated. Both were found to cross the BBB in a time-dependent manner (at 3 and 18 h), although with higher efficiency for the methylated metabolite. This suggests that the transport process involved is likely passive diffusion, since methylated molecules are more lipophilic than unconjugated epicatechin and, therefore, more easily cross the BBB [160].
Similarly, quercetin and its metabolite (3-O-glucuronyl-quercetin; 50 mg/kg body wt; p.o.) were found in rat brain tissue in a capillary endothelial cell line [161]; its transportation through the BBB was also evaluated. In this sense, it was found that quercetin and its glucuronidated form crossed the BBB (a model cell line hCMEC/D3), increasing its concentration as time passed (over 1, 3, and 18 h). However, its metabolite showed a faster rate [160].
Interestingly, in the case of anthocyanins, these compounds have only been identified intact or glycosylated (unconjugated) in the CNS [162,163]. Three anthocyanins were evaluated: delphinidin-3-O-glucoside (Dp-3-gl), cyanidin-3-O-glucoside (Cy-3-gl), and malvidin-3-O-glucoside (Mv-3-gl), and all crossed hCMEC/D3 cells in a time-dependent manner (over 1, 3, and 18 h) but showed different efficiencies associated with their hydrophilicity. Dp-3-gl is the most hydrophilic and, therefore, least efficient of the three derivatives, which suggests the influence in which the polarity of anthocyanins plays in their transport through the BBB [160]. In addition, the neuroprotective effects of flavonoids could possibly be mainly exerted by their conjugated metabolites, considering that a mixture of different conjugated quercetin metabolites was shown to exert more effective antihypertensive effects than the isolated molecule [164].

3. Participation of Serotonergic System in the Antidepressant-like Effect of Flavonoids

Diverse preclinical studies have evaluated the effect of flavonoids in promoting the development of new alternatives for treating depression [16]. In this sense, the antidepressant-like effect produced by flavonoids has been demonstrated using animal models of depression such as the FST, TST, or sucrose water consumption test [165], among others. These effects are associated with the modulation of several neurotransmission systems such as noradrenergic, dopaminergic, and serotonergic [17,130]. Table 2 summarizes the findings regarding the antidepressant potential of some flavonoids that exert their action through the serotonergic system, which has been extensively related to the etiology of depression and the mechanism of action of antidepressant drugs [130,166,167].
Table 2. Flavonoids with antidepressant-like effects and their action on the serotonergic system.
Concerning this, hesperidin, a flavonoid abundant in highly consumed citrus fruits such as oranges and lemons, is capable of crossing the BBB [188] and produces anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and neuroprotective effects [188,189]. It has also been reported to produce antidepressant-like effects in murine models, e.g., the acute or chronic administration of 1 mg/kg hesperidin to mice or chronic administration of 20, 50, and 100 mg/kg hesperidin to rats reduced the immobility time in FST and TST [169,171] and increased sucrose intake [160] and 5-HT concentrations in the HP, PFC, and amygdala [171,172], while the pretreatment with p-chlorophenylalanine methyl ester (pCPA), a selective inhibitor of tryptophan hydroxylase, an important enzyme in the biosynthesis of serotonin, prevents the antidepressant-like effect of hesperidin [169].
Similarly, in preclinical research on mice, the acute administration of 10 and 20 mg/kg fisetin [166], a flavonoid found in fruits such as apples and strawberries, or acute (10, 20, and 50 mg/kg) [180] or chronic (25, 50, and 100 mg/kg) [181] naringenin, the predominant flavonoid in grapefruit, produces antidepressant-like effects, which are associated with increased 5-HT in the frontal cortex and HP that are abolished through pretreatment with pCPA [167,180,181], which implicates the serotonergic system in its pharmacological and behavioral effects.
In complement, chronic administration of apigenin (7 and 50 mg/kg) [179,180] or (5 and 20 mg/kg) chrysin [129,184], both flavonoids from plants Passiflora incarnata and Matricaria chamomilla, also increased motivation behaviors—less immobility in FST and TST and higher consumption of sucrose—mediated by the serotonergic system, with higher concentrations of 5-HT in the PFC, HP, and nucleus accumbens, all effects that were prevented by pretreatment with pCPA or ondansetron, a serotonin 5-HT3 receptor antagonist [131,178,184], important effects if we consider that these brain structures are involved in the physiopathology of depression and are pharmacological targets of antidepressant drugs (i.e., SSRIs, tricyclics, and MAOIs).
The data show that flavonoids have antidepressant-like effects that are related to the modulation of the serotonergic system, similar to that observed with clinical antidepressant drugs, highlighting the potential utility of flavonoids to produce therapeutic effects in humans.

4. BDNF Implicated in the Antidepressant-like Effect of Flavonoids

Several flavonoids exert different mechanisms through which they can modulate the BDNF system and are therefore able contribute to their antidepressant-like effect [16,190,191]. Among these flavonoids are hesperidin, apigenin, astibilin, bacalein, chrysin, dihydromyricetin, hyperoside, icariin, 7,8-dihydroxyflavone, myricetin, naringenin, naringenin, orientin, and silibinin [17]. Table 3 summarizes the actions on BDNF related to the antidepressant-like effect of flavonoids.
Table 3. Role of BDNF in the antidepressant-like effect of flavonoids.
According to the above, one of these reported mechanisms is the one that suggests that flavonoids possess a neuroprotective action mediated by the increase in BDNF levels, since they prevent induction of the depressive-like behavior in rodents submitted to depression models (i.e., TST, FST) [167,199,201]. For example, chronic pretreatment with hesperidin (0.3 and 1 mg/kg, i.p., for 21 days) increases the levels of BDNF in HP, which is associated with the decrease in immobility in the FST [154]. It has also been observed that the daily administration of baicalein (10, 20, and 40 mg/kg; i.p.) prior to daily exposure to repeated restraint stress (2 h/day) for 14 days increases BDNF levels and decreases corticosterone concentrations in the HP, which is related to prevention of depressive-like behavior in FST [192].
Moreover, these polyphenolic compounds can increase the expression of BDNF in the brain. In this sense, the antidepressant-like effect of chronic treatment with different flavonoids such as icariin (5 and 10 mg/kg, p.o., for 28 days), naringenin (10 and 20 mg/kg, p.o., for 21 days), silibinin (50 and 100 mg/kg, p.o., for 15 days), and quercetin (10 mg/kg, p.o., for 10 weeks) were associated with increased levels of BDNF mRNA, particularly in brain structures such as HP and PFC [194,195,200,201].
On the other hand, some flavonoids, in addition to regulating BDNF, can also modulate its receptor TrkB [193,197,199,200,201]. For example, chronic treatment with fisetin (5 mg/kg, p.o., for 21 days) increases the TrkB receptor activation in the HP of ICR mice [199]; similarly, sibylinin (50 and 100 mg/kg, p.o., for 15 days) promotes increased expression of this receptor in the HP of male Sprague-Dawley rats [200], actions that were both associated with a decrease in immobility behavior in the FST and TST, which is considered an antidepressant-like effect. These results have significant implications considering that the activity of BDNF and its TrkB receptor can independently regulate the therapeutic effects of conventional antidepressants [88]. The above suggests that flavonoids could exert their therapeutic actions through an alternative mechanism than regulating BDNF levels.
Flavonoids, at preclinical level, can also reverse depressive behaviors by increasing BDNF levels, such as in the case of depressed patients administered antidepressants [153]. For example, astibilin (10, 20, and 40 mg/kg, i.p., for 21 days) reversed the anhedonic behavior in male C57BL/6J induced by chronic stress, which was related to the increase in BDNF levels in the frontal cortex [168]. This same effect has been reported for naringenin (10 and 20 mg/kg, p.o., for 21 days) [182], 7,8-dihydroxyflavone (10 and 20 mg/kg, i.p., for 28 days) [197], and chrysin (5 and 20 mg/kg, p.o., for 28 days) [130], which confirms the potential of flavonoids as possible molecules that could be used for the development of pharmacological prototypes for the treatment of depression.

This entry is adapted from the peer-reviewed paper 10.3390/ijms231810896

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