1. Introduction
Traditionally, going back to nature has always been an answer, and in reality, natural products have been essential in the development of new drugs, particularly for infectious and cancerous disorders (
Atanasov
Phytoestrogens are naturally occurring nonsteroidal phenolic plant compounds that can be categorized into flavonoids and non-flavonoids (
Boyle
Isoflavones predominantly found in soybean and soybean products serve as major dietary sources for humans. Isoflavones are recognized for their chemoprotective properties, offering an alternative therapeutic approach for various hormonal disorders, including breast cancer, prostate cancer, cardiovascular diseases, osteoporosis, and menopausal symptoms (
Křížová
Administration of isoflavones is known to produce a significant pharmacokinetic problem identified with their deprived bioavailability (
Passamonti
2. Biochanin-A and its pharmacological benefits
2.1 Cancer
Biochanin-A has prevented/inhibited the development of different types of cancers. Figure 1 depicts the types of cancers where biochanin-A has an impact in controlling the disease. Various kinds of cancer are a) breast cancer, b) prostate cancer, c) lung cancer, d) pancreatic cancer, e) colon cancer, f) osteosarcoma, g) glioma, h) leukaemia. The molecular structure of biochanin-A is depicted in the centre of diagram ( Feng and Lai, 2023).
Figure 1.
The schematic diagram represents pharmacological actions of biochanin-A in different types of cancer.
Biochanin-A has prevented the development of different types of cancers. a) breast cancer, b) prostate cancer, c) lung cancer, d) pancreatic cancer, e) colon cancer, f) osteosarcoma, g) glioma, h) leukaemia. The molecular structure of biochanin-A is depicted in the centre of diagram.
2.1.1 Breast cancer
Breast cancer is the most widely reported form of cancer, presented with several subtypes and varying vulnerability to anti-cancer agents. Tumour cells have shown a unique pattern in terms of uncontrolled growth, dedifferentiated morphology, and resistance to apoptosis (
Baba and Câtoi, 2007). In most types of solid cancers like breast cancer, the normal signalling pathways are interrupted, stimulating refractory growth, no cell death, and progressive invasion of neighbouring tissues. Soy-rich diets in controlling hormone-dependent cancers have gained wide attention lately (
Shu
With the influence of biochanin-A, HER2 receptor activation is inhibited, resulting in blockade of downstream signalling pathways of cancer cell development, viability, and metastasis. In HER2-positive breast cancer, the transcriptional unit nuclear factor (NF)-κB is suppressed (
Sehdev, Lai and Bhushan, 2009). MAPK or ERK 1/2 phosphorylation is inhibited causing the poor mitogenic effect (
Sehdev, Lai and Bhushan, 2009;
Bhardwaj
Figure 2.
Mechanism of action of biochanin-A in breast cancer.
Biochanin-A dephosphorylates HER-2 receptor and MAPK or ERK1/2 causing blockade of cancer cell development, growth, metastasis, and mitogenesis. Biochanin-A inhibits Akt phosphorylation thereby downregulates mTOR signals and disrupts the cell cycle. It inhibits NFkB and interrupts transcription. It inhibits topoisomerase-ll and DNA replication (
Azuma
2.1.2 Prostate cancer
Prostate cancer has been reported as a commonly found cancer in men and the second prominent death reason in western countries (
Siegel, Miller and Jemal, 2020). Diet can influence the prostate carcinogenesis process (
Bostwick
Biochanin-A elevates the level of testosterone-UDPGT (Uridine 5′-diphospho-glucuronosyltransferase) enzyme activity and disrupts the androgen metabolism in connection with UDP-glucuronic acid. PLK-1 (Polo-like kinase-1) is responsible for various cell cycles activities such as Cdc2 (Cyclin-dependent kinase) stimulation and mitosis. Biochanin-A induces p21 which is a negative regulator for PLK-1 leading to prostate cancer cell apoptosis (
Seo
Phytoestrogens have been predicted as compounds liable for chemoprotective activity on prolonged exposure. Prostatic cell proliferation in PC-3, LNCaP, and DU145 were inhibited by biochanin-A with variable mechanisms (
Hempstock, Kavanagh and George, 1998). Aromatase enzyme has an impact on the level of oestrogen. Biochanin-A upon competitive inhibitory action on aromatase minimizes oestrogen level and exhibit anti-cancer activity (
Campbell and Kurzer, 1993). TRAIL-induced cell death is an epitome in cancer prevention. Biochanin-A through deactivating NF-kB and death receptor (DR) 4/5 mediated caspases causes TRAIL-associated cell death in prostatic cancer cell lines (
Szliszka
In Figure 3 the inhibition of aromatase enzyme and lowering of oestrogen level by biochanin-A, the activation of p21 and antagonization of PLK-1 action, increased level of testosterone UDGPT enzyme disrupting androgen metabolism with the treatment of biochanin-A, the interrupted level of tyrosine kinase blocking the signal transduction, the prompted ER- β and E-cadherin level leading to the inhibition of cell proliferation, via biochanin-A inhibition of NF-kB inducing the TRAIL associated apoptosis and the increased conversion of testosterone into glucuronide resulting low appearance of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) is illustrated.
Figure 3.
Biochanin-A on prostate cancer.
Biochanin-A inhibits aromatase enzyme and decreases estrogen levels. It activates p21 and antagonizes PLK-1 action. Increased level of testosterone UDGPT enzyme disrupts androgen metabolism with the treatment of biochanin-A. The level of tyrosine kinase is interrupted and inhibits signal transduction. It induces ER-β and E-cadherin and inhibits cell proliferation. Biochanin-A inhibits NF-kB and induced TRAIL associated apoptosis. It increased conversion of testosterone into glucuronide resulting low appearance of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) (
Sun
2.1.3 Lung cancer
Cancer affecting the most vital body parts elucidate the difficulty of its therapy. Lung cancer has often been reported and is one of the supreme death causes in cancer patients. The fight against cancer with phytochemicals will benefit mankind greatly. Studies have been carried out on soy isoflavones, utilized as an integral system for the treatment and to boost the radiation viability on lung tumors (
Hillman and Singh-Gupta, 2011;
Singh-Gupta
The mechanism with which soy isoflavones boost radiation therapeutic effect is through inhibiting APE1/Ref-1 DNA repair in A549 cells, which leads to cell killing (
Singh-Gupta
Figure 4 demonstrates the apoptotic pathway by biochanin-A on lung cancer. p21, caspase-3, and Bcl-2 levels are elevated by biochanin-A, which causes lung cancer to undergo apoptosis. Both metastasis and E-cadherin are reduced. TNF-a, IL-6, and cytokines are only a few examples of the pro-inflammatory mediators that are generated to aid in apoptosis. Soy isoflavones along with radiation therapy shows a synergistic effect in causing cell death by inhibiting APE/Ref-1 as depicted in the figure.
Figure 4.
Apoptotic pathway by biochanin-A on lung cancer.
Biochanin-A cause apoptosis in lung cancer by increasing p21, caspase-3, and Bcl-2 levels. It lowers E-cadherin and blocks metastasis. Pro-inflammatory mediators such as TNF-α, IL-6, and cytokines are released to facilitate apoptosis. Soy isoflavones along with radiation therapy shows a synergistic effect in causing cell death by inhibiting APE/Ref-1 (
Singh-Gupta
2.1.4 Pancreatic cancer
The low survival rate of pancreatic cancer with limited anti-cancer agents makes it difficult to manage the disease. It is also known to be the most aggressive one among other cancers (
Baghurst
The cluster formation ability of pancreatic cancer cells Panc1 was hindered by biochanin-A with dose-dependent toxicity. It inhibited mitosis, migration, and invasion of pancreatic cancer progression. EGFR, Akt, and MAPK pathways are deactivated resulting in apoptosis in Panc1 and AsPC-1 cell lines suggesting combination therapy with biochanin-A could be considered for treatment (
Bhardwaj
2.1.5 Colon cancer
It is the most prevalent type of cancer in existence today. Statistics by the American Cancer Society, 2019, shows that colon cancer is the second leading source of mortality in cancer. As specified by American Institute for Cancer Research and World Cancer Research Fund reports dietary factors may elucidate the risk of having colorectal cancer. Intake of isoflavone-contained food like soy influences gastric cancer occurrence (
Yan, Spitznagel and Bosland, 2010;
Ko
The synergism of biochanin-A with 5-fluorouracil evidenced in Caco-2 and HCT-116 cell lines indicates the modulatory influence of biochanin-A in colon cancer treatment. The biochanin-A on its own shows cytotoxicity in the cell lines. It blocked the “Akt and GSK3β phosphorylation and boosted the degradation of β-catenin” (
Mahmoud
The inhibitory mechanism of biochanin-A on colon cancer is shown in Figure 5 explaining biochanin-A when given in combination enhanced the anti-cancer effect exerted by 5-fluorouracil and gamma radiation in colon cancer cells. Biochanin-A has inhibited Akt and GSK3β phosphorylation.
Figure 5.
Colon cancer inhibition by biochanin-A.
Biochanin-A boosted the anti-cancer effect exerted by 5-fluorouracil and gamma radiation when given in combination in colon cancer cells. Biochanin-A has inhibited Akt and GSK3β phosphorylation (
Puthli, Tiwari and Mishra, 2013;
Mahmoud
2.1.6 Glioma
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most widely reported and destructive brain malignancy, has a high death rate. GBM tends to reappear since it displays both intra- and inter-tumoral heterogeneity (
Shergalis
In a dose-dependent manner, biochanin-A influenced the tumour invasion capacity by lowering matrix-degrading enzymes (MMP 2 and MMP 9) tested in U87MG cells (
Puli, Lai and Bhushan, 2006). Biochanin-A inhibited endothelial cell functions in rat brain tumour, brain endothelial cells, and chick chorioallantoic membrane model with its anti-angiogenic properties through ERK/AKT ex vivo/mTOR dephosphorylation (
Jain, Lai and Bhushan, 2015). Biochanin-A along with temozolomide disclosed exceptional anti-cancer activities in human glioblastoma cells, U87 MG, and T98-G. Biochanin-A by lowering EGFR, p-ERK (Extracellular signal related kinases), p-AKT (Protein kinase-B), c-myc, and MT-MMP1 (Membrane type matrix metalloproteinase) activation, inhibited cell survival. It influenced the abilities of cancer cells in viability, DNA repair, proliferation, and cell cycle arrest. Biochanin-A synergistically improved temozolomide anti-cancer ability in GBM (
Desai
2.1.7 Osteosarcoma
Osteosarcoma (OS), a malignant bone tumour, is generally seen in children and adolescents. The low survival rate of OS is associated with drug resistance causing the poor response to chemotherapy. Hence, phytochemicals that can contribute to OS treatment are significant.
Biochanin-A and doxorubicin together suppressed the tumour development by promoting the release of apoptotic factors, damaging mitochondrial membrane potential, eliciting “the intrinsic mitochondrial pathway, caspase-9 and -3 activation” and increasing “Bax: Bcl-2/Bcl-XL ratio” (
Hsu
2.1.8 Leukaemia & other cancers
Leukaemia or blood cancer affects the most important connective tissue of our body: blood, and the blood-forming tissue. It is considered a deadly and serious form of cancer (
Leukaemia Care, 2020). However, isoflavones have revealed their protective role in several investigations (
Xu
Biochanin-A in JCS cells prompted monocytic differentiation to macrophages (markers “Mac-l and F4/80”) showing increased phagocytic activity. The cytokines production (“IL-la, IL-lo, IL-4 and TNF-α”) is regulated in the late stage of monocytic differentiation of JCS cells by biochanin-A (
Fung
Anti-cancer effects of biochanin-A substantiated through in vivo and in vitro experiments is summarized in Table 1.
Table 1.
Anti-cancer effects of biochanin-A substantiated through in-vivo and in-vitro experiments is summarized in Table 1.
( ↑increase, ↓decrease or × inhibit, + activation).
Pharmacological Application | Study models | Dose used | Major findings\mechanisms | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Breast cancer | HER-2 Positive breast cancer cell lines | 2–100 μM | NFκB ↓ Unique anticancer agent MAPK or ERK 1/2 phosphorylation × | ( Sehdev, Lai and Bhushan, 2009) |
MCF-7 human breast carcinoma cells | 10–50 μM | Cell cycle apoptotis + DMBA × | (
Han
| |
Human granular luteal cells | 10–100 nm | Cyp19 enzyme ↓ Have role in aromatase activity | ( Rice, Mason and Whitehead, 2006) | |
MCF-7 breast cancer cell lines | 500 nm | Anti-oestrogenic property | ( Collins, McLachlan and Arnold, 1997) | |
CTLL-2 cells (Murine IL-2 dependent T cell clone | 5–50 μM | Topoisomerase II × | (
Azuma
| |
Prostate cancer | LNCaP cell lines | 0.5–50 μM | testosterone-UDPGT ↑ PSA ↓ Androgen metabolism × | (
Sun
|
PC-3 (p53 mutant) and LNCaP (p53 wild type) | 100 μM | p21 ↑ PLK-1 ↓ Cell apoptosis + | (
Seo
| |
DU-145 and LNCaP | 8.0 μg/mL for LNCaP 9.0 μg/mL for DU-145 cells | EGF-stimulated growth × tyrosine kinase events × | ( Peterson and Barnes, 1993) | |
Red clover diet Model (Isoflavones constitute 1.26% of the diet) | Biochanin-A 5.74 mg isoflavone/g pellet | ER-β and E-cadherin levels ↑ Cancer formation × | ( Slater, Brown and Husband, 2002) | |
LNCaP cells Athymic mice with LNCaP flank tumors | 10 μg/mL 400 μg for animal xenographs model | DNA fragmentation ↑ p21 and cyclin B ↓ Tumor size and incidence ↓ | (
Rice
| |
Fibroblast cell | 100 μg/mL | 5 α-reductase isozymes × hormone-dependent tumours ↓ | ( Evans, Griffiths and Morton, 1995) | |
LNCaP cells and DU145 cells, | 20–100 μM | TRAIL-associated cell death NF-κB × | (
Szliszka
| |
PC-3, LnCaP, and DU145 | 100 μmol/L | Cell proliferation × Growth and metabolism × | ( Hempstock, Kavanagh and George, 1998) | |
Lung cancer | 95D and A549 cancer cells injected to male nude mice | Biochanin-A IP 15,60 mg/kg group of A549 18,75 mg/kg group of 95D | Cell proliferation of lung cancer cells × | (
Li
|
Human lung adenocarcinoma cell line(A427),Human monocyte leukaemia cell line (AML-193) | 5, 20, 40 μM | Hinderes proinflammatory effects triggered from leukaemia | (
Wang
| |
New born mouse model | 65 mg/kg | Carcinogenesis × | (
Lee
| |
Non-small cell lung cancer | Soy red clover isoflavones | Isoflavones combined with EGFR inhibitors improve NSCLC cell growth | (
Ambrosio
| |
Pancreatic cancer | Panc/AsPC-1 | 5 mg/mL | Cell proliferation × Apoptosis + | (
Bhardwaj
|
Colon cancer | Caco-2,HCT-116 cell lines | 34 μM | Biochanin-A combination with 5 FU promotes management of colon cancer | (
Mahmoud
|
HT29cells | 1–100 μM | Biochanin-A increases radiotoxicity | ( Puthli, Tiwari and Mishra, 2013) | |
HCT-116 Sw-480 cell lines | 2.5–100 μM | Biochanin-A enhances genotoxYangiharaic effects and antitumor mechanism |
Yanagihara
| |
320 DM cell line | 20 μM | Biochanin-A is a promising target for cancer | (
Kohen
| |
Glioblastoma multiforme | U87MG | 50 μM | MMP 2 and MMP 9 ↓ | ( Puli, Lai and Bhushan, 2006) |
Rat brain tumour (C6) Murine brain endothelial (bEnd.3) cells Ex-vivo chick chorioallantoic membrane model | 5, 35, and 70 μmol/L | Anti-angiogenic properties through ERK/AKT/mTOR dephosphorylation | ( Jain, Lai and Bhushan, 2015) | |
U-87 MG, and T98 G | 70 μM | EGFR, p-ERK, p-AKT, c-myc, and MT-MMP1 activation ↓ cell survival * Synergism to anti-cancer ability of Temozolomide | (
Desai
| |
U-87 human glioblastoma cell line | 20 μM and 70 μM | p-EGFR, p-ERK, uPAR, MMP-2 ↓ | ( Jain, Lai and Bhushan, 2011) | |
Osteosarcoma | MG63 and U2OS Cells | 20±0.3 μg/mL | Bax: Bcl-2/Bcl-XL ratio ↑ caspase 9 & 3 + MMP ↓ | (
Hsu
|
MG63 and U2OS Cells | 40 μM | Apoptosis + caspase-3 ↑ Cell proliferation and invasion × | (
Zhao
| |
Leukaemia | JCS | Monocytic differentiation to macrophages + Phagocytic activity ↑ | (
Fung
|
2.2 Metabolic disorders
2.2.1 Diabetes
Diabetes mellitus, an age-old metabolic disorder, has a high rate of occurrence around the world. It is described as “hyperglycaemia” caused by deformities in insulin secretion, insulin activity, or both (
American Diabetes Association, 2009). The long-term presence of diabetes is associated with many other complications. Even though currently, accessible medications might be significant in the control of diabetes, these medications are joined with certain side effects as well. A few varieties of phytochemicals have shown potential for the management of diabetes with minor or no side effects (
S.Mohana Lakshmi, Rani and Reddy, 2012;
Surya
Biochanin-A action in streptozotocin-induced diabetic rats displayed improved glucose digestion and dropped HbA1C levels. Serum visfatin amount was enhanced (
Azizi, Goodarzi and Salemi, 2014). STZ diabetic rats on oral treatment with biochanin-A exposed anti-diabetic properties by lowering FBS and hyperglycaemia-induced free radicals (
Sadri
The influence of biochanin-A in diabetic neuropathy using an STZ-induced rat model revealed that, mechanical allodynia and hyperalgesia (paw withdrawal threshold) were reversed upon treatment. Hence, biochanin-A could be a drug of choice in diabetic neuropathy (
Chundi
The anti-diabetic mechanism of biochanin-A is by decreasing oxidative stress. SIRT-1 influences the progression of insulin sensitivity. Biochanin-A act as a PPAR gamma receptor activator and produces anti-diabetic effect. The increased release of adiponectin and low resistin level to improve the diabetic condition is depicted in Figure 6.
Figure 6.
Anti-diabetic mechanism of biochanin-A.
Biochanin-A decreases the oxidative stress and helps in diabetes condition. It increases the expression of SIRT-1 and progresses insulin sensitivity. Biochanin-A is a PPAR-γ receptor activator producing an anti-diabetic effect. It increases the release of adiponectin and decreases the resistin level to improve the diabetic condition (
Shen
2.2.2 Dyslipidaemia
Dyslipidaemia or hyperlipidaemia is a very common metabolic disorder characterized by a high level of triglycerides and low-density lipoproteins, responsible for cardiovascular diseases (
Thompson, 2004). The association between soy diet and hyperlipidaemia is a discussed topic among researchers. Soy can normalize the increased cholesterol level while taken in combination with conventional hyperlipidaemic drugs (
Costa and Summa, 2000). A randomized control trial on isoflavones in hypercholesterolaemia showed that there was a minor significant positive impact on triglycerides levels supporting this fact (
Qin
Treatment with a moderate dose of biochanin-A in HFD mice has shown a substantial lowering of LDL and total cholesterol. Lipoprotein lipase and hepatic triglyceride lipase levels are increased. Molecular docking studies on biochanin-A displayed a noteworthy role in reducing cholesterol-ester transport (
Xue
2.2.3 Obesity
Obesity has been the most serious global health concern that is rapidly turning into an outbreak, currently affecting both developing and developed countries to varying degrees. Despite the fact that obesity and overweight are on the rise in modern society, there are no pharmacological treatments available. As a result, both researchers and health-care systems must prioritise the development of safe and effective treatments for obesity.
In HFD-induced obesity, oral treatment of biochanin-A significantly reduced the physiological changes that have occurred during trace element metabolism. This could be due to the inhibition of pathological mechanisms that derange trace elements, possibly by reverting hyperglycemia and insulin resistance and changing hepcidin and HO-1 levels. These findings strongly suggest that biochanin-A has therapeutic potential in the treatment of obesity and the prevention of cardiovascular disease (
Antony Rathinasamy
Biochanin-A promotes AMPK signalling in C3H10T1/2 MSCs, leading to upregulation of brown fat adipocyte. According to the findings, biochanin-A treatment improves mitochondrial biogenesis and lipolysis, modulating the thermogenic process. Biochanin-A improves energy expenditure by boosting mitochondrial respiration while preserving the functional mitochondria. These data imply that biochanin-A might be a new antiobesity drug (
Rahman
2.3 Cardiovascular disorders
Asian countries usually presented lower cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality rates as it has very different dietary patterns from that of Western countries. Benefits over cardiovascular disease risk is an appreciated capability of soy protein and isoflavones. Isoflavones restore the disrupted endothelial function (
Sacks
Biochanin-A mitigated myocardial injury by inhibiting the anti-inflammatory pathway, TLR4/NF-kB/NLRP3 signalling. It perfected the injury area and stopped the release of aspartate transaminase (AST), creatine kinase (CK-MB) and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH) enzyme. Biochanin-A further decreased inflammatory cytokines and protected rats from myocardial infarction (
Bai
2.4 Airway hyperresponsiveness
In the 19th and 20th centuries, people were drinking red clover tea or tincture (ethanolic extract) as an antispasmodic to give relief in whooping cough, measles, bronchitis, laryngitis, and tuberculosis (
Felter and Lloyd, 1999). Biochanin-A being the major constituent of red clover can act as an anti-spasmodic agent in asthma and COPD (chronic obstructive pulmonary disease) (
Ko
It has been proven that biochanin-A diminishes airway resistance and improves respiratory health in methacholine (MCh) induced mice. Inflammatory mediators released were under control and ovalbumin (OVA)-specific immunoglobulin E (IgE) levels were low, hence, evidencing significant effect in allergic asthma and COPD (
Ko
2.5 Osteoarthritis
Osteoarthritis is a condition that affects articular cartilage and synovial joints with structural and functional failure and diminishes the quality of life ( Hunter and Felson, 2006). It is a chronic and irreversible disease causing pain and disability. Soybean isoflavones stopped the cartilage damage in animals with an ovarian hormone deficiency, which is indicative of its effect on osteoarthritis ( Toda, Sugioka and Koike, 2020).
Biochanin-A controlled the cartilage damage by deactivating the expression of MMP, NF-κB, and activation of TIMP-1, hence effective in OA cases (
D. Q. Wu
2.6 Inflammation
Inflammation, biological feedback of the human body to damaging stimuli, is also associated with a wide range of diseases such as “obesity, atherosclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, and even cancer”. Isoflavones are famous for their anti-inflammatory properties. Underlining the evidence for isoflavones is required in managing chronic diseases in which inflammation plays a vital role. Isoflavones that are an assured agent in various inflammatory diseases, show exciting anti-inflammatory effects proven in animal and human studies through better anti-oxidant properties, reduced pro-inflammatory enzymes, and NF-κB regulation (
Su
Biochanin-A repressed LPS induced TNF-α and IL-8 production, NF-κB. Through PPAR-γ activation, biochanin-A displayed an anti-inflammatory effect hence, can be considered as an agent in the therapeutic management of inflammatory cardiovascular disease (
Su
2.7 Anti-oxidant activity
Antioxidant rich foods may lower the chance of developing a number of ailments including heart disease and certain cancers. Free radicals are removed from cells by antioxidants, which minimizes oxidation related damage in the body. Biochanin -A being a good natural anti-oxidant can produce various health benefit in human biological system.
Water-soluble urban particulate matter is a major lung toxicant shown to induce oxidative damage in human alveolar basal-epithelial cells. Biochanin-A tested in this model produced a protective effect by increasing anti-oxidant markers such as catalase, superoxide dismutase and glutathione. The malondialdehyde (MDA) and nitric oxide (NO) levels were found to be reduced and mitigated the lung injury by regulating MEK5/extracellular signal-related kinase 5 (ERK5) nuclear factor-erythroid factor 2-related factor 2 (Nrf-2) pathway (
Xue
2.8 Hepatotoxicity
The hepatoprotective abilities of biochanin-A were explored in carbon-tetrachloride hepatotoxicity animal model. The anti-oxidant and anti-inflammatory capacity of biochanin-A influence the elevated hepatic enzyme level, such as AST, ALP, ALT, bilirubin, etc., and found to be a promising molecule in hepatotoxicity models (
Breikaa
2.9 Anti-bacterial activity
Natural isoflavones have exposed anti-microbial activity in various studies. The specific inhibitory action of biochanin-A was explored against possible
2.10 Neurological disorders
Neurological disorders hampering the brain and nervous system are associated with a wide group of disorders as well as varying pathophysiology and symptoms. Inflammation is thought to be one important pathogenesis to cause peripheral (neuropathic pain, fibromyalgia) and central nervous systems disorders (e.g., Parkinson's disease, ischaemia, and traumatic brain injury, etc.) (
Skaper
2.10.1 Cerebral ischaemia
Two key pathways in the development of cerebral ischaemia/reperfusion damage are oxidative stress and neuroinflammation. Biochanin-A pretreatment on experimental animals induced with stroke, showed that the neurological deficiency is improved and the size of neural infarct and brain oedema was reduced. Biochanin-A reduced oxidative stress in the brain by augmenting SOD (superoxide dismutase) and GSH-Px (glutathione peroxidase) and repressing MDA (malondialdehyde) levels. The neuroprotective effects of biochanin-A might be attributed to the activation of the Nrf2 pathway and suppression of the NF-κB pathway (
Guo
2.10.2 Parkinson’s disease
Parkinson’s disease (PD) is related to the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the SNpc. Oxidative stress in connection with the neurodegenerative symptoms has been found in this condition. Studies on lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-injected animals revealed that treatment with O-methylated biochanin-A amended the behavioural patterns of animals, stopped the dopamine neuronal loss, and prevented the harmful microglia activation. Biochanin-A additionally blocked the activation of NADPH-oxidase, MDA formation, SOD, and GPx actions in the brain preferring its choice as an anti-oxidant in PD management (J. Wang
2.10.3 Alzheimer's disease
The neuroprotective ability of various phytoestrogenic isoflavones including biochanin-A was screened against oxidative stress-induced cell death in the HCN 1-A (human cortical cell line) maintained in culture using the Alzheimer's disease-associated hydrogen peroxide (H
2O
2) model. Due to the anti-oxidant capacity of isoflavones, the concentration-reliant reduction in neuron viability by H
2O
2 was prevented (
Occhiuto
The neuroprotective effects of biochanin-A on LPS-induced dopaminergic neuron injury in in vivo and in vitro models, as well as the molecular processes involved were explored. Biochanin-A therapy for 21 days substantially reduced behavioural impairment in PD rats, lowered dopaminergic neuronal loss, and suppressed microglia activation in LPS-induced PD rats. Biochanin-A protects LPS-induced PD rats, and the mechanisms are thought to be related to the suppression of the inflammatory response and the MAPK signalling pathway. Biochanin-A prevented primary microglial activation and protected dopaminergic neurons, reduced the amount of nitric oxide, IL-1, and TNF-α in supernatants, and suppressed the formation of reactive oxygen species (
Wang
The behavioural and neurochemical effects of biochanin-A among cognitive-impaired animals in scopolamine-induced amnesia and naturally occurring aged animal amnesia models were assessed. In exteroceptive behavioural paradigms such as the elevated plus maze and the passive shock avoidance paradigm, biochanin-A decreased the transfer latency and increased the step through latency considerably in scopolamine-treated and natural aged mice. Acetylcholinesterase activity was found decreased in a dose-reliant manner amongst biochanin-A treated animals. A high level of GSH suppressed the pyknotic neurons formation, noradrenalin and dopamine expression thereby revealed the protective ability of biochanin-A against Alzheimer's disease (
Biradar, Joshi and Chheda, 2014). The enzyme beta-site amyloid precursor protein cleaving enzyme-1 (BACE1) is involved in the aberrant synthesis of the amyloidogenic peptide Aβ, and is one of the primary causes of Alzheimer's disease (AD). BACE1 is found to be a crucial target protein in the identification of novel strategies to minimize and prevent Alzheimer's disease. Biochanin-A non-competitively inhibited BACE1 with an IC
50 value of 28 μM. With a binding energy of −8.4 kcal/mol, biochanin-A might strengthen the chemical's strong interaction with the allosteric site of BACE1, leading to more effective BACE1 inhibition (
Youn
In postmenopausal women, oestrogen insufficiency is a major risk factor for Alzheimer's disease. In the Morris water-maze test, chronic treatment with biochanin-A replicated the capacity of β-estradiol (E2) to restore learning and memory deficits in ovariectomized (OVX) rats. Biochanin-A also lowered MDA levels and increased SOD and GSH-Px enzyme levels eventually produced neuro-protective effect and can be used to treat memory loss in postmenopausal women who are suffering from an oestrogen imbalance (
Zhou
2.11 Anti-fibrotic activity
Studies have been conducted to explore the role of biochanin-A in idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), a chronic inflammatory disease characterised by fibrotic cascade events such as epithelial-mesenchymal transition, synthesis of extracellular matrix, and collagen formation in the lungs. The study was conducted on LL29 cells (lung fibroblast from IPF patient), NHLF (normal human lung fibroblast), and DHLF (diseased human lung fibroblast). Furthermore, the research focused on evaluating the effect of biochanin-A in bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis. Biochanin-A treatment produced increased levels of Smad7 expression and decreased Smad2mRNA expression in cell lines, suggesting that biochanin-A contributes to pulmonary fibrosis by inhibiting TGF-β/Smad signalling. In vivo results of the research revealed that lung index was increased in the bleomycin-induced pulmonary fibrosis group (BML) and biochanin-A reversed the same. The study proved that via modulating the TGF-β/Smad Pathway, biochanin-A prevented the onset and progression of pulmonary fibrosis (
Andugulapati
Biochanin-A was investigated for its antifibrotic effects on a rat liver model wherein hepatotoxicity was induced through intraperitoneal chloroform. Hepatic fibrosis is the consequence of the wound-healing action of the liver which results in the accumulation of high fibrous scar tissue. The fibrotic lesions in the biochanin-A treated group were found to be minimum, and it also decreased α-SMA levels which confirms its anti-fibrotic effect. The study observed that biochanin-A improved blood flow and have good antioxidant properties. Biochanin-A decreased the TNF-α and NO levels. Thus, biochanin-A in the liver has anti-fibrotic properties by reducing oxidative stress while preserving hepatic function (
Breikaa
The several pharmacological models explained in the review are collectively summarized in Table 2 and Table 3 emphasizing the model either in vitro or in vivo along with the dose of biochanin-A used in the study and the molecular mechanism behind the activity.
Table 2.
Pharmacological findings of biochanin-A validated via in vivo experiments.
(↑increase, ↓decrease, × inhibit, + activation).
Pharmacological application | Study model | Dose and route used | Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Diabetes | STZ-rat model | 10 mg/kg bodyweight per os (p/o) | HbAIc level ↓ Glucose tolerance, Insulin resistance ↓ | ( Harini, Ezhumalai and Pugalendi, 2012) |
10–15 mg/kg p/o | Glucose digestion ↑ HbA1C levels ↓ Serum visfatin amount ↑ | ( Azizi, Goodarzi and Salemi, 2014) | ||
10–15 mg/kg p/o | FBS ↓ hyperglycemia-induced free radicals | (
Sadri
| ||
15 mg/kg p/o | Nesfatin-1 ↑ Insulin ↑ FBG level ↓ | ( Eskandari Mehrabadi and Salemi, 2016) | ||
10–15 mg/kg p/o | Adiponectin ↑ insulin ↑ serum resistin ↓ serum adiponectin ↑ | (
Salemi
| ||
0.1, 1 and 5 mg/kg intraperitonial (i/p) | Mechanical allodynia ↓ Hyperalgesia ↓ | (
Chundi
| ||
10–15 mg/kg p/o | The concentrations of VEGF, TNF-α and IL-1β in retina ↓ blood sugar ↓ inflammation ↓ angiogenesis ↓ | (
Mehrabadi
| ||
10–20 mg/kg/day p/o | Diabetic nephropathy × Renal TGF-β expression↑ | ( Ahad, 2013) | ||
db/db diabetic mice model | 10–50 mg/kg/day red clover extract (Red clover extract containing 9.6% biochanin-A) p/o | Hepatic PPARα/γ stimulation ↑ Hepatic fatty acid synthase levels ↓ | (
Qiu
| |
STZ-diabetic C57BL/6 mice | 1 mg/kg/day p/o | Hepatic PPARα ↑ Lipid profile ↓ Glucose levels ↓ | (
Qiu
| |
High fat diet + streptozotocin | 10, 20 and 40 mg/kg | Glucose tolerance ↓ Insulin resistance ↓ Insulin sensitivity, SIRT-1 expression ↑ | ( Oza and Kulkarni, 2018) | |
Streptozotocin- Nicotinamide rat model | 5 mg/kg | Fasting blood glucose ↓ Body weight ↑ | (
Ghadimi
| |
Dyslipidaemia | HFD Mice model | 30mg/kg/day,60mg/kg/day, and 120mg/kg/day | LDL,total cholesterol ↓ Lipoprotein lipase and hepatic triglyceride lipase ↑ | (
Xue
|
Obesity | HFD-induced obese rats. | p/o | HFD induced trace elements metabolism ↓ Glucose, insulin, ferritin, total cholesterol, phospholipids, free fatty acids ↓ | (
Antony Rathinasamy
|
C57BL/6 mice HFD | 0.05% biochanin-A p/o | PPAR ↑ glucose 6-phosphatase and pyruvate kinase × Obesity-induced hepatic steatosis and insulin resistance × | (
Park
| |
Cardiovascular disorders | Transient coronary ligation in Sprague-Dawley rats | 12.5, 25 and 50 mg/kg intragastrically | TLR4/NF-kB/NLRP3 signalling × AST, CK-MB, LDH enzyme releases ↓ | (
Bai
|
apoE-/- mice fed with Western diet. | 50 mg/kg intragastrically | pro-inflammatory cytokines ↓ | (
Yu
| |
isoproterenol-induced MI rats | 10 mg/kg body weight subcutaneously | antioxidant levels ↑ lipid peroxidation and detoxifying enzyme systems ↓ |
Govindasami
| |
Airway hyper responsiveness | Ovalbumin-Induced Airway Hyperresponsiveness BABL/c mice model | 100 μmol/kg, p/o | Total inflammatory cells ↓ Eosinophils ↓ Neutrophils ↓ Th1-released IL-2 & TNF-α ↓ Th2-released IL-4 & IL-5 ↓ | (
Ko
|
Male Hartley guinea pigs | 10–30 μm | baseline tension and cumulative OVA-induced contractions in isolated sensitized guinea pig tracheal × degranulation of mast cells× inflammation ↓ | (
Ko
| |
PM2.5-induced lung toxicity in SD rats | 5, 50,100 mg/kg intragastric administration | cell death ↓ release of pro-inflammatory mediators, MDA, LDH, AKP ↑ antioxidant enzymes levels ↑ | (
Xue
| |
Osteoarthritis | Osteoarthritis rabbit model | 5–25 mM intra-articular injection | Cartilage damage ↓ MMP, NF-κB × TIMP-1 + | (
D. Q. Wu
|
Anti-microbial activity | BALB/c mice+ intragastric administration of
| 2 μg/mL | Salmonella infection × AMPK/ULK1/mTOR pathway |
Zhao
|
Neurological disorders: | ||||
Cerebral ischemia: | C57BL/6 male mice middle cerebral artery occlusion induced Focal cerebral ischemia | 5,10 mg/kg intraperitoneal | GOT protein expression ↑ stroke lesion volume ↓ | (
Khanna, Stewart, Gnyawali, Harris, Balch, Spieldenner, Chandan K. Sen,
|
Ischemic stroke Rat model | 10, 20, or 40 mg/kg/day | infarct size and brain edema ↓ SOD,GSH-Px ↑ MDA,NF-κB × Nrf2 nuclear translocation, HO-1 + |
Guo
| |
Middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) rat model | 10, 20, or 40 mg/kg/day | inflammatory response TNF-α and IL-1β levels, MPO activity↓ p38 signalling ↓ | (
Wang
| |
Parkinson’s disease | SD Rats with Iron and Rotenone Co-treatment | 30 mg/kg | malondialdehyde ↓ glutathione levels ↑ striatal dopamine depletion↓ behavioural impairments ↓ maintains redox equilibrium | (
Yu
|
C57BL/6 with enhanced neonatal Iron and MPTP co-treatment | 10–60 mg/kg | microglial p38 MAPK activation × behavioral and neurochemical deficits ↑ | (
Li
| |
Alzheimer's disease | LPS-induced PD rats | 12.5, 25, 50 mg/kg | inflammatory response ↓ MAPK signalling pathway × nitric oxide, IL-1, and TNF-α | (
Wang
|
scopolamine-treated mice and natural aged cognitive deficit mice | 40 mg/kg | AchE activity ↓ GSH ↑ thiobarbituric acid, ROS ↓ pyknotic neurons ↓ | (
Biradar
| |
ovariectomized (OVX) rats | 5,20,60 mg/kg | restore learning and memory deficits, MDA ↓ SOD and GSH-Px ↑ | (
Youn
|
Table 3.
Pharmacological findings of biochanin-A established via in vitro experiments.
(↑increase, ↓decrease, × inhibit, + activation).
Pharmacological application | Study model | Dose and route used | Findings | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Diabetes | Cervical carcinoma (HeLa) cells | EC 50 = 1–4 mmol/L | PPAR receptor activator | (
Shen
|
Obesity | C3H10T1/2 cells | _ | Mitochondrial respiration ↑ AMPK signalling + | (
Rahman
|
Neuronal cells | _ | ER stress ↓ leptin signalling × | (
Horiuchi
| |
Airway hyper responsiveness | OVA-Induced Tracheal Contractions In Vitro. | 10–30 μm | anti-spasmodic agent | (
Ko
|
Osteoarthritis | IL-1β induced rabbit chondrocytes | 5, 25, 50 μM | Cartilage damage ↓ MMP, NF-κB × TIMP-1 + | (
D. Q. Wu
|
Primary Rat Adipose-Derived Stem Cells (ADSCs). | 0.3 μM | Adipocyte differentiation × PPARγ, LPL, OPN and leptin ↓ OPG ↑ osteoblast differentiation ↑ adipogenesis × |
Su
| |
Inflammation | ADSCs | 0.1–1 μM | cytoplasmic lipid droplet accumulation × PPAR-γ × Runx2, OPG, RhoA protein, OCN ↑ | (
Su
|
RAW 264.7 and HT-29 cell lines | 100 μM and 50 μM | NO production, LPS, IKK activity × NF-κB + IL-6, IL-1β, and TNF-α production in RAW264.7 cells ↓ cell proliferation in HT-29 cell line × | (
Kole
| |
Anti-microbial activity | Potential bacterial pathogens of the human digestive system | 0.13mM 0.26–0.51 mM | Clostridium tertium, clostridium clostridioforme × | (
Flesar
|
in vitro antibacterial activity | 16 to 128 μg/mL | Growth inhibitory effect to gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria | (
Hummelova
| |
| 12 μM & 6.5 μM buccal formulation | Chlamydia growth × Antichlamydial action + | (
Hanski
| |
HeLa cells/Macrophages | _ | Salmonella infection × AMPK/ULK1/mTOR pathway |
Zhao
| |
Neurological disorders: | ||||
Cerebral ischemia: | Mouse hippocampal HT4 neural cells or primary cortical neurons | 25 and 50 μM | GOT mRNA expression ↑ glutamate-induced cell death × | (
Khanna, Stewart, Gnyawali, Harris, Balch, Spieldenner, Chandan K. Sen,
|
L-glutamate-induced cytotoxic PC12 cell line | 1, 10, 50, and 100 μM | cytotoxicity ↓ glutathione ↑ LDH, caspase-3 | (
Tan
| |
Parkinson’s disease | Rat mesencephalic neuron-glia cultures | 12.5, 25, 50 mg/kg
| NADPH-oxidase, MDA formation, SOD, and GPx × dopamine neuronal loss ↓ | (
Wang
|
BV2 microglial cells | 1.25, 2.5, 5 μM | LPS related microglia activation × TNFα, IL-1β, nitric-oxide, and ROS ↓ |
Chen
| |
LPS treated mice BV 2 microglial cells | 1.25, 2.5, 5 μM | TNFα, IL-1β, nitric oxide, and ROS ↓ MAPK signalling × | (
WU
| |
BV2 Microglia | 5, 10, 20 μM | PPAR-γ levels ↑ NF-κB release × | ( Zhang and Chen 2015) | |
Alzheimer's disease | HCN 1-A cell line with H2O2 model | 0.5, 1 and 2 μg/mL | H2O2 induced neurotoxicity ↓ | (
Occhiuto
|
PC12 cells with β-Amyloid-Induced Neurotoxicity | 100 μM | Amyloid beta induced cell toxicity ↓ cytochrome-c and Puma Bcl-2/Bax ↓ | ( Tan and Kim 2016) | |
Microglial cells | 1.25, 2.5, 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30 μM | microglial activation × nitric oxide, IL-1b, and TNF-α ↓ ROS × MAPK signaling pathway × | (
Wang
| |
In-vitro BACE-1 activity assay | 28 μM | BACE1 × strong binding between the chemical and the allosteric site of BACE1 |
3. Clinical trial on biochanin-A
A clinical trial is underway to check the effect of red clover extract including biochanin-A among post-menopausal women with osteopenia. The results are yet to be concluded ( University of Aarhus, 2015). The clinical trial data are summarized in Table 4
Table 4.
Clinical trial on biochanin-A.
Sl no. | Study design | Title of the study | Objective | Comparison to: |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Double-blind parallel, randomized intervention trial ( University of Aarhus, 2015) | Postmenopausal women with osteopenia (low bone mineral density) | Effects of daily intake of fermented red clover extract on oestrogen dependent bone mineral resorption | Placebo |
4. Limitation of biochanin-A
Biochanin-A is a poorly soluble bioflavonoid, which prevents its oral absorption, despite having a rapid clearance and a broad apparent volume of distribution. The bioavailability of biochanin-A is poor. It was reported that biochanin-A undergoes extensive metabolism. The pharmacological value of biochanin-A was limited by its poor water solubility and low bioavailability. Numerous attempts have been made to increase the solubility and bioavailability of biochanin-A, including the use of dispersants, silver nanoparticles, liposomes, different film formulations for buccal delivery, nanostructured lipid carriers with and without polyethylene glycol, and cyclodextrin inclusion complexes. Esters of biochanin-A and carbamate ester derivatives have also been developed, and they have higher metabolic stability than biochanin-A. Thus, several attempts are being made worldwide to enhance biochanin-A’s solubility and bioavailability without compromising its effectiveness (
Yu
5. Conclusion
This review discusses various pharmacological applications of biochanin-A focussing on the molecular pathway that might be responsible for its beneficial action. Biochanin-A might be able to modify various systems of the human body like the cardiovascular system, CNS, respiratory system, etc. It has a remarkable effect on hormonal cancers and other types of cancers. The growing amount of research on biochanin-A in breast, lung, colon, prostate, pancreatic cancers is an illustration of its impact in medicine. Through modulating oxidative stress, SIRT-1 expression, PPAR-γ receptors, and other multiple mechanisms, biochanin-A produces anti-diabetic action. The diverse molecular mechanistic pathways involved in the pharmacological ability of biochanin-A indicate that it is a very promising molecule and have the potential to stimulate drug development for multiple disorders.
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Abstract
This review was aimed at summarizing the cellular and molecular mechanisms behind the various pharmacological actions of biochanin-A. Many studies have been reported claiming its application in cancers, metabolic disorders, airway hyperresponsiveness, cardiac disorders, neurological disorders, etc. With regard to hormone-dependent cancers like breast, prostate, and other malignancies like pancreatic, colon, lung, osteosarcoma, glioma that has limited treatment options, biochanin-A revealed agreeable results in arresting cancer development. Biochanin-A has also shown therapeutic benefits when administered for neurological disorders, diabetes, hyperlipidaemia, and other chronic diseases/disorders. Isoflavones are considered phenomenal due to their high efficiency in modifying the physiological functions of the human body. Biochanin-A is one among the prominent isoflavones found in soy (glycine max), red clover (Trifolium pratense), and alfalfa sprouts, etc., with proven potency in modulating vital cellular mechanisms in various diseases. It has been popular for ages among menopausal women in controlling symptoms. In view of the multi-targeted functions of biochanin-A, it is essential to summarize it's mechanism of action in various disorders. The safety and efficacy of biochanin-A needs to be established in clinical trials involving human subjects. Biochanin-A might be able to modify various systems of the human body like the cardiovascular system, CNS, respiratory system, etc. It has shown a remarkable effect on hormonal cancers and other cancers. Many types of research on biochanin-A, particularly in breast, lung, colon, prostate, and pancreatic cancers, have shown a positive impact. Through modulating oxidative stress, SIRT-1 expression, PPAR gamma receptors, and other multiple mechanisms biochanin-A produces anti-diabetic action. The diverse molecular mechanistic pathways involved in the pharmacological ability of biochanin-A indicate that it is a very promising molecule and can play a major impact in modifying several physiological functions.
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