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Metal complexation mechanisms of polyphenols associated to Alzheimer's Disease.

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Polyphenols are a class of compounds produced by plants, which share the ability to act as potent antioxidants. First investigations on polyphenols' antioxidant activity are dated almost twenty years ago… Click to show full abstract

Polyphenols are a class of compounds produced by plants, which share the ability to act as potent antioxidants. First investigations on polyphenols' antioxidant activity are dated almost twenty years ago when their relationship and implication with the prevention and treatment of cancer was proposed for the first time. Later, in the early 2000s, the neuroprotective effects of several polyphenols were demonstrated. Nowadays, the benefits of a plethora of polyphenols have been studied, and their ameliorating effects in several disease conditions, like cancer, cardiac and neuronal diseases, are widely recognized. More than 1000 papers dealing with polyphenols and Alzheimer's disease have been published so far, describing the antioxidant properties, the chelating metal features, and the anti-aggregating behavior of these compounds. This review aims to rationalize, from a chemical point of view, the metal complexation mechanisms of polyphenols related to two significant events of Alzheimer's disease: oxidative stress and metal ion dyshomeostasis. To address this issue, we have herein discussed several aspects implicated in Alzheimer's disease and polyphenols involved in treating the disease.

Keywords: mechanisms polyphenols; complexation mechanisms; alzheimer disease; disease; metal complexation

Journal Title: Current medicinal chemistry
Year Published: 2021

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