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Adaptive cellular stress pathways as therapeutic targets of dietary phytochemicals: focus on the nervous system.

Abstract
During the past 5 decades, it has been widely promulgated that the chemicals in plants that are good for health act as direct scavengers of free radicals. Here we review evidence that favors a different hypothesis for the health benefits of plant consumption, namely, that some phytochemicals exert disease-preventive and therapeutic actions by engaging one or more adaptive cellular response pathways in cells. The evolutionary basis for the latter mechanism is grounded in the fact that plants produce natural antifeedant/noxious chemicals that discourage insects and other organisms from eating them. However, in the amounts typically consumed by humans, the phytochemicals activate one or more conserved adaptive cellular stress response pathways and thereby enhance the ability of cells to resist injury and disease. Examplesof such pathways include those involving the transcription factors nuclear factor erythroid 2-related factor 2, nuclear factor-κB, hypoxia-inducible factor 1α, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ, and forkhead box subgroup O, as well as the production and action of trophic factors and hormones. Translational research to develop interventions that target these pathways may lead to new classes of therapeutic agents that act by stimulating adaptive stress response pathways to bolster endogenous defenses against tissue injury and disease. Because neurons are particularly sensitive to potentially noxious phytochemicals, we focus on the nervous system but also include findings from other cell types in which actions of phytochemicals on specific signal transduction pathways have been more thoroughly studied.
AuthorsJaewon Lee, Dong-Gyu Jo, Daeui Park, Hae Young Chung, Mark P Mattson
JournalPharmacological reviews (Pharmacol Rev) Vol. 66 Issue 3 Pg. 815-68 (Jul 2014) ISSN: 1521-0081 [Electronic] United States
PMID24958636 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, N.I.H., Intramural, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't, Review)
CopyrightU.S. Government work not protected by U.S. copyright.
Chemical References
  • Free Radical Scavengers
  • Phytochemicals
Topics
  • Animals
  • Free Radical Scavengers (pharmacology)
  • Humans
  • Nervous System (drug effects, metabolism)
  • Neurons (metabolism)
  • Phytochemicals (pharmacology)
  • Phytotherapy (methods)
  • Signal Transduction (drug effects)
  • Stress, Physiological (drug effects)
  • Translational Research, Biomedical

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