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Hitting the sweet spot: A systematic review of the bioactivity and health benefits of phenolic glycosides from medicinally used plants

journal contribution
posted on 2021-08-16, 00:53 authored by Joel JohnsonJoel Johnson, Janice ManiJanice Mani, Daniel Broszczak, Shirtika S Prasad, Charitha P Ekanayake, Padraig Strappe, Peter Valeris, Mani NaikerMani Naiker
Phenolic acid and flavonoid glycosides form a varied class of naturally occurring compounds, characterised by high polarity-resulting from the glycone moiety-and the presence of multiple phenol functionalities, which often leads to strong antioxidant activity. Phenolic glycosides, and in particular flavonoid glycosides, may possess strong bioactive properties with broad spectrum activity. This systematic literature review provides a detailed overview of 28 studies examining the biological activity of phenolic and flavonoid glycosides from plant sources, highlighting the potential of these compounds as therapeutic agents. The activity of glycosides depends upon the biological activity type, identity of the aglycone and the identity and specific location of the glycone moiety. From studies reporting the activity of both glycosides and their respective aglycones, phenolic glycosides appear to generally be a storage/reserve pool of precursors of more bioactive compounds. The glycosylated compounds are likely to be more bioavailable compared to their aglycone forms, due to the presence of the sugar moieties. Hydrolysis of the glycoside in the in vivo environment would release the free aglycone, potentiating their biological activity. However, further high-quality studies are needed to firmly establish the clinical efficacy of glycosides from many of the plant species studied.

History

Volume

35

Issue

7

Start Page

3484

End Page

3508

Number of Pages

25

eISSN

1099-1573

ISSN

0951-418X

Location

England

Publisher

Wiley

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Acceptance Date

2021-01-25

External Author Affiliations

University of Sri Jayewardenepura, Sri Lanka; Queensland University of Technology; The University of the South Pacific, Fiji

Author Research Institute

  • Centre for Indigenous Health Equity Research

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Print-Electronic

Journal

Phytotherapy Research