Potential Roles and Key Mechanisms of Hawthorn Extract against Various Liver Diseases
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Phytochemistry of Hawthorn
3. Pharmacological Properties of Hawthorn
3.1. Hepatoprotective Effect
3.2. Antisteatotic Effect
3.3. Anti-Inflammatory and Antifibrotic Effects
3.4. Anticancer Effects
4. Safety of Hawthorn
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sources | Models | Doses | Results and Mechanisms | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Extract of C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 100 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high-fat diet ↓Serum ALP, LDH | [34] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 10 mL/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high-fat diet ↓Serum ALP, GGT ↓Liver pyknotic nuclei | [35] |
Extract of hawthorn (leaves) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 160 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high-fat diet ↓Ballooning degeneration necrosis in liver tissue Antioxidant ↓Nrf2-positive stained hepatocytes ↑Hepatic Nrf2 mRNA ↓Hepatic GST, HO-1, rGCS mRNA and protein | [36] |
Ethanolic extract of C. oxycantha | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-fat diets | 20 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high-fat diet ↓Serum AST, ALT, GGT, ALP, total bilirubin, direct bilirubin, LDH, and MDA | [28] |
70% ethanol extract of C. aronia (leaves and flowers) | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-fat diets | 200 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high-fat diet ↓Highly vacuolated hepatocytes ↓Damaged endoplasmic reticuli ↓Distorted intercellular spaces ↓Irregular nuclear membranes Antioxidant ↑Hepatic GSH ↓Hepatic TBARS | [37] |
Water extract of C. aronia | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-fat diets | 200 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high-fat diet ↓Serum AST, ALT, and GGT | [29] |
70% ethanol extract of C. monogyna | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-cholesterol diet | 100 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high cholesterol diet ↓Serum AST, ALT, and GGT ↓Hepatic MDA protein ↓Highly vacuolated hepatocytes and nuclear chromatin condensation in liver tissue Antioxidant ↓Hepatic total thiol molecules ↑DPPH radical scavenging | [30] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida31 (leaves) | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-cholesterol diet | 5, 7.5, 10 mL/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high cholesterol diet ↓Serum AST, ALT, and GGT ↓Cell necrosis, sinusoidal distension in liver tissue | [31] |
80% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed high-fat and high-cholesterol diets | 5, 10% | ↓Liver damage induced by high fat and cholesterol diet ↓Serum AST, ALT, ALP, and LDH | [32] |
Powder from dried C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-triglyceride diet | 2% | ↓Liver damage induced by high triglyceride diet ↓Serum ALT, ALP ↓Hepatocyte enlargement | [33] |
Polyphenols from 80% ethanol extract of hawthorn peels and fleshes | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fructose diet | 400 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by high-fructose diet ↓Serum AST, ALT, and ALP ↓Hepatic MDA protein ↓Hepatocyte necrosis, cytoplasmic vacuolation, cellular degeneration, and the loss of cellular boundaries in liver tissue Antiapoptosis ↓Hepatic Bax, Bax/Bcl-2 protein ↑Hepatic Bcl-2 protein (only in hawthorn peels) Antioxidant ↑Hepatic SOD, GSH-Px protein ↓Hepatic Nrf-2, ARE protein | [38] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed 25% alcohol for 55 days | 1 cc/100 g | ↓Liver damage induced by alcohol ↓Serum AST, ALT, ALP, and LDH | [39] |
95% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed 50% alcohol for 6 weeks | 100 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by alcohol ↓Hepatic ADH activity ↑Hepatic ALDH activity | [40] |
80% methanol extract of C. pinnatifida | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells induced by 1.3% ethanol | 0.4% | ↓Liver damage induced by alcohol ↑Cell viability 152.5% Antioxidant ↑DPPH radical scavenging ↓LDL oxidation | [10] |
70% ethanol extract of dried C. pinnatifida (branches) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells induced by 1.3% ethanol | 0.4, 1% | ↓Liver damage induced by alcohol ↑Cell viability 136.3% ↓Liver cell DNA damage ↓CYP2E1 enzyme expression ↓Catalytic activity of CYP2E1 | [41] |
Methanol extract of C. oxycantha (leaves) | In vivo, male Wistar rats administered with 3 g/kg/day of 35% ethanol | 50 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by alcohol ↓Serum AST, ALT, GGT, ACP, and bilirubin ↑Liver glycogen ↓Hepatic MDA ↓Cell congestion, necrosis, and sinusoidal distension in liver tissue | [42] |
70% ethanol extract of the leaves of Crataegus pinnatifida from a local market in China | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed 56% alcohol for 8 weeks | 5 mL/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by alcohol ↓Serum AST, ALT, and GGT ↓Cell necrosis, sinusoidal distension in liver tissue | [31] |
Flavonoids from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats injected with LPS | 50, 100, 200 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by LPS ↓Serum AST, ALT ↓Extensive hepatocyte necrosis in liver tissue | [43] |
Hawthorn capsule extracted from C. oxyacantha (leaves and flowers) | In vivo, male Wistar albino rats received an oral administration of CCl4 | 350 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by toxic substances ↓Serum AST, ALT, GGT, and bilirubin ↑Serum albumin ↓Hepatic MDA, Antioxidant ↓Hepatic MPO activity ↓Hepatic P. Carbonyl activity ↑Hepatic SOD activity | [44] |
Extract of hawthorn | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats of both sexes received an oral administration of CCl4 | 40 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by toxic substances ↓Serum AST, ALT, and ALP ↓Vacuolar degeneration in hepatocytes ↑Protein and mucopolysaccharide contents in hepatocytes | [45] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vitro, Rat hepatocytes H4IIE induced by cadmium | 0.1, 0.3 mg/mL | ↓Liver damage induced by heavy metals ↑Cell viability Antiapoptosis ↓PARP cleavage | [46] |
In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats intravenously injected with cadmium 4 mg/kg | 50, 100 mg/kg | ↓Liver damage induced by heavy metals ↓Serum AST, ALT, and LDH Hepatic degenerative regions and cells Hepatic centrolobular necrosis with peripheral hemorrhages/congestions | ||
70% ethyl alcohol extract of C. aronia (flowers) | In vivo, male albino rats with 50% partial hepatectomy | 0.5, 1% | ↓Liver damage induced by partial hepatectomy ↓Serum AST, ALT Antiapoptosis ↓TUNEL-positive hepatocytes | [47] |
Sources | Models | Doses | Results and Mechanisms | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Extract of hawthorn (leaves) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 160 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue Antioxidant ↑Nrf2-positive stained hepatocytes ↑Hepatic Nrf2 mRNA ↓Hepatic GST, HO-1, rGCS mRNA, and protein | [36] |
Extract of C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 100 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue ↓Hepatic TC, TG Adiponectin/AMPK signaling ↑Serum adiponectin ↑Hepatic adiponectin receptor 2 mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic p-AMPKα protein ↓Hepatic SREBP-1c mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic PPARα mRNA and protein ↓Heptatic CD36, FAS, and SCD1 mRNA ↑Hepatic CPT1, ACO, and ACOX1 mRNA | [34] |
Haw pectin pentaoligosaccharide from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 150 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue AMPK signaling ↑Hepatic CPT1, ACO mRNA ↑Hepatic PPARα mRNA and protein | [53] |
Haw pectin from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 50, 150, 300 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Hepatic TC Hepatic cholesterol and bile acid metabolism ↓Hepatic HMG-CoA reductase, ACAT mRNA, and protein ↑Hepatic cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase mRNA and protein | [54] |
Haw pectin from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 300 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Liver weight ↓Hepatic TC Hepatic cholesterol and bile acid metabolism ↓Hepatic bile acids ↑Gallbladder bile acids ↑Hepatic cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic ABCA1, SR-BI, LXRα, BSEP mRNA, and protein | [55] |
Haw pectin from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 300 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Hepatic TC Hepatic cholesterol and bile acid metabolism ↓Hepatic FGFR4 mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase mRNA and protein ↑Fecal bile acids ↓Hepatic bile acids | [56] |
Haw pectin from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 50, 150, 300 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue Antioxidant ↑Hepatic SOD activity | [74] |
Haw pectin from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 50, 150, 300 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Hepatic TG Antioxidant ↑Hepatic SOD, CAT, and GSH-Px activity ↑Hepatic TAC, GSH levels | [75] |
Haw pectin from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 150 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue ↓Hepatic TG, total lipids AMPK/SIRT1/NFκB signaling ↑Hepatic AMPKα, SIRT1 mRNA ↓Hepatic NFκB mRNA and protein | [77] |
70% ethanol extract of C. aronia (leaves and flowers) | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-fat diets | 200 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue Antioxidant ↑Hepatic GSH ↓Hepatic TBARS | [37] |
80% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed high-cholesterol diet | 2% | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue Antioxidant ↑Hepatic SOD, CAT activity | [57] |
70% ethanol extract of C. monogyna | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-cholesterol diet | 100 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Liver/body weight ↓Hepatic TC, TG, and LDL Antioxidant ↓Hepatic total thiol molecules ↑DPPH radical scavenging | [30] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 397.3 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Liver weight | [58] |
80% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat and high-cholesterol diets | 5, 10% | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat and cholesterol diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue ↓Hepatic TC, TG | [32] |
80% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-cholesterol diet | 100 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Hepatic lipid contents Hepatic cholesterol metabolism ↑Hepatic cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase mRNA | [59] |
80% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Syrian golden hamsters fed with high-cholesterol diet | 0.5% | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Hepatic FFA contents Hepatic cholesterol metabolism ↑Hepatic cholesterol 7α-hydroxylase protein | [60] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-cholesterol diet | 2% | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Hepatic TC, TG Hepatic cholesterol metabolism ↓Hepatic ACAT activity | [61] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-cholesterol diet | 124 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Hepatic lipid contents | [62] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, female ICR mice fed with high-cholesterol diet | 50, 100 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Liver weight ↓Hepatic TC, TG | [63] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 500, 1000 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Hepatic TC, TG | [64] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 10 mL/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue ↓Hepatic TC, TG | [65] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 10 mL/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue | [35] |
Methanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, female ICR mice fed with high-fat diets | 100 μg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Liver weight | [66] |
95% ethanol extract of C. cuneata (fruits) | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diet | 90, 130 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue | [67] |
Ethanol extract of C. cuneata (fruits) | In vivo, male mice fed with high-fat diet | 130 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Hepatic TC Hepatic cholesterol metabolism ↓Hepatic HMG-CoA reductase mRNA ↓Hepatic HMG-CoA reductase promoter activity ↓Hepatic NFκB p65 mRNA | [68] |
Water extract of C. aronia (herba) | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-fat diet | 200 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue | [29] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-cholesterol diet | 5, 7.5, 10 mL/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue | [31] |
Ethanol extract of C. oxycantha | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed high-fat diet | 20 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue | [28] |
Water extract of C. aronia (fruits) | In vivo, New Zealand white rabbits fed high-fat diet | 10 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fat diet ↓Hepatic TC, TG, FFA, and phospholipids Hepatic cholesterol metabolism ↓Hepatic HMG-CoA reductase, ACAT activity ↑Hepatic cholesterol 7-hydroxylase activity | [69] |
Polyphenols from 80% ethanol extracs of hawthorn peels and fleshes | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fructose diet | 400 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by high-fructose diet ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue ↓Hepatic TC, TG Antioxidant ↑Hepatic SOD, GSH-Px protein ↓Hepatic Nrf-2, ARE protein AMPK signaling ↑Hepatic PPARα protein ↓Hepatic FAS protein | [38] |
Ethanol extract of C. oxycantha (fruits) | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed atherogenic diet | 0.5 mL/100 g | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by atherogenic diet ↓Hepatic TC Hepatic cholesterol catabolism to bile acids ↑Hepatic LDL receptors ↓Hepatic cholesterol biosynthesis ↑Hepatic bile acids ↑Fecal bile acidss | [70] |
80% ethanol extract of hawthorn (fruits) | In vivo, ApoE−/− mice fed atherogenic diet | 2% | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by atherogenic diet ↓Hepatic TC ↓Hepatic fatty acids Antioxidant ↑Hepatic TAC protein ↑Hepatic SOD mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic GSH-Px mRNA ↑Hepatic CAT mRNA and protein | [71] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male C57BL/6J mice fed MCD diet | 300 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by MCD diet ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue ↓Hepatic TG AMPK signaling ↑Hepatic p-AMPKα protein ↓Hepatic SREBP-1c, C/EBPα, and PPARγ protein ↓Hepatic ACC, FAS protein | [72] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, female ovariectomized Sprague Dawley rats | 100, 200 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis after ovariectomy ↓Hepatic TG Antioxidant ↑Hepatic Nrf2 mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic HO-1 mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic GSH-Px mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic CAT mRNA and protein | [73] |
Water extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed 25% alcohol for 55 days | 1 cc/100 g | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by alcohol ↓Liver weight | [39] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed 56% alcohol for 8 weeks | 5 mL/kg | ↓Hepatic steatosis induced by alcohol ↓Liver weight ↓Fat deposition in liver tissue | [31] |
Sources | Models | Doses | Results and Mechanisms | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hawthorn capsule extracted from C. oxyacantha (leaves and flowers) | In vivo, male Wistar albino rats orally administered with CCl4 | 350 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by CCl4 ↓Hepatic IL-1β, TNF-α mRNA ↓Hepatic COX-2 mRNA Antioxidant ↓Hepatic MPO activity ↓Hepatic P. carbonyl contents ↑Hepatic SOD activity NFκB signaling ↓Hepatic NFκB mRNA | [44] |
Flavonoids from C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats injected with LPS | 50, 100, 200 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by LPS ↓Neutrophil leukocyte infiltration in liver tissue ↓Hepatic expression of iNOS and COX-2 | [43] |
80% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-cholesterol diets | 2% | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Hepatic expression of NOS Antioxidant ↑Hepatic SOD, CAT activity | [57] |
70% ethanol extract of C. monogyna | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-cholesterol diets | 100 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high-cholesterol diet ↓Inflammatory cells infiltration in liver tissue Antioxidant ↓Hepatic total thiol molecules ↑DPPH radical scavenging | [30] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-cholesterol diets | 5, 7.5, 10 mL/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high cholesterol diet ↓Inflammatory cells infiltration in liver tissue | [31] |
Powder from dried C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-triglyceride diets | 2% | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high triglyceride diet ↓Mononuclear inflammatory cells around the hepatic blood vessels | [33] |
Haw pectin from the water extract of C. pinnatifida | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fat diets | 150 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high-fat diet ↓Hepatic TNF-α, IL-6 contents ↑Hepatic IL-10 contents NIK/IKK/NFκB signaling ↓Hepatic RIP1, NIK, IKKα, TNFα, TNFR1, and TRAF2 mRNA ↓Hepatic NFκB mRNA and protein AMPK/SIRT1/NFκB signaling ↑Hepatic AMPKα, SIRT1 mRNA ↓Hepatic NFκB mRNA and protein | [77] |
Polyphenols from the ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vivo, male Wistar rats fed with high-fat diets and streptozotocin | 300 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high-fat diet and streptozotocin ↓Inflammatory cells infiltration in liver tissue ↓Hepatic TNF-α, MCP-1, and IL-6 protein AMPK/SIRT1/NFκB signaling ↑Hepatic AMPKα, PPARδ, and SIRT1 protein ↓NFκB p65 protein | [82] |
Water extract of hawthorn fruits and leaves | In vivo, male Sprague Dawley rats fed with high-fat diets | 1 mg/100 g | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high-fat diet ↓Inflammatory cells infiltration in liver tissue | [35] |
80% ethanol extract of hawthorn (fruits) | In vivo, ApoE−/− mice fed with atherogenic diets | 2% | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by atherogenic diet ↓Hepatic MCP-1, TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, and IL-10 mRNA and protein Antioxidant ↑Hepatic TAC protein ↑Hepatic SOD mRNA and protein ↑Hepatic GSH-Px mRNA ↑Hepatic CAT mRNA and protein | [71] |
Polyphenols from 80% ethanol extract of hawthorn peels and fleshes | In vivo, male Kunming mice fed with high-fructose diets | 400 mg/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by high-fructose diet ↓Hepatic expression of IL-1, IL-6, and TNF-α Antiapoptosis ↓Hepatic Bax, Bax/Bcl-2 protein ↑Hepatic Bcl-2 protein (only in hawthorn peels) Antioxidant ↓Hepatic MDA protein ↑Hepatic SOD, GSH-Px protein ↓Hepatic Nrf-2, ARE protein AMPK signaling ↑Hepatic PPARα protein | [38] |
70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (leaves) | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats fed with 56% alcohol for 8 weeks | 5 mL/kg | ↓Hepatic inflammation induced by alcohol ↓Inflammatory cells infiltration in liver tissue | [31] |
Extract of hawthorn | In vivo, Sprague Dawley rats orally administered with CCl4 | 40 mg/kg | ↓Liver fibrosis induced by toxic substances ↓Marked fibrosis around the main blood vessels in liver tissue | [45] |
Hawthorn capsule extracted from C. oxyacantha (leaves and flowers) | In vivo, male Wistar albino rats orally administered with CCl4 | 350 mg/kg | ↓Liver fibrosis induced by toxic substances ↓Hepatic fibrotic septa ↓Severity score of Masson ↓Masson-positive area ↓Hepatic hydroxyproline protein ↓Hepatic collagen 1 and 3 protein and mRNA HSC inactivation ↓Hepatic α-SMA-positive cells ↓Hepatic α-SMA mRNA ↓Hepatic TGF-β mRNA Antioxidant ↓Liver MPO activity ↓Liver P. carbonyl contents ↑Liver SOD activity | [44] |
Methanol extract of C. oxycantha (leaves) | In vivo, male Wistar rats administered with 3 g/kg/day of 35% ethanol | 50 mg/kg | ↓Liver fibrosis induced by alcohol ↓Moderate fibrosis near lobule central veins in liver tissue Antioxidant ↓Hepatic MDA | [42] |
Sources | Models | Doses | Results and Mechanisms | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | 0.8 mg/mL | ↓Cell viability Apoptosis induction ↑Caspase-3 mRNA ↓Bcl-2 mRNA and protein ↑Bax mRNA and protein | [86] |
80% ethanol extract of C. monogyna (buds and fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | 0.5, 1 mg/mL | ↓Cell viability | [87] |
Triterpenoids from 80% acetone extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | ↓Cell viability (IC50 < 5 μM) | [88] | |
Phenylpropanoids from 70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 and Hep3B cells | 100 μM. | ↓Cell viability (IC50: 17.5–27.36 μM in HepG2 and 38.96–43.58 μM in Hep3B) Apoptosis induction | [89] |
Phenylpropanoids from 70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 and Hep3B cells | 50 μM | ↓Cell viability Apoptosis induction ↑Apoptotic cells Autophagy induction Monodansylcadaverine positive cells Cell cycle arrest G2/M arrest by (−)-crataegusanoid A G0/G1 arrest by (−)-crataegusanoid B | [94] |
Lignans from 70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (seeds) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | ↓Cell viability (IC50: 38.54–39.97 μM) | [92] | |
80% methanol extract of C. monogyna (buds and fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | ↓Cell viability | [91] | |
80% acetone extract of C. pinnatifida obtained from Shandong Institue of (fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | 5–30 μg/ml | ↓Cell viability (IC50: 11.58 μg/mL) ↓Cell proliferation IC50 of ursolic acid 12.58 μM IC50 of corosolic acid 9.44 μM IC50 of maslinic acid 23.42 μM IC50 of oleanolic acid 54.02 μM | [20] |
Dihydrobenzofuran neolignan from 70% ethanol extract of C. pinnatifida (seeds) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | ↓Cell viability (IC50 = 30.96 μM) | [93] | |
80% ethanol extract of of C. armena (shoots, flowers, and fruits) | In vitro, human hepatoma HepG2 cells | ↓Cell viability (IC50 = 8.66 μg/mL) | [90] |
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Kim, E.; Jang, E.; Lee, J.-H. Potential Roles and Key Mechanisms of Hawthorn Extract against Various Liver Diseases. Nutrients 2022, 14, 867. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14040867
Kim E, Jang E, Lee J-H. Potential Roles and Key Mechanisms of Hawthorn Extract against Various Liver Diseases. Nutrients. 2022; 14(4):867. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14040867
Chicago/Turabian StyleKim, Eujin, Eungyeong Jang, and Jang-Hoon Lee. 2022. "Potential Roles and Key Mechanisms of Hawthorn Extract against Various Liver Diseases" Nutrients 14, no. 4: 867. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14040867
APA StyleKim, E., Jang, E., & Lee, J. -H. (2022). Potential Roles and Key Mechanisms of Hawthorn Extract against Various Liver Diseases. Nutrients, 14(4), 867. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14040867