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Marine-Derived bioactive compounds from Aquaculture: Receptor-Mediated neuroprotection in neurodegenerative disorders.

PMID 41698629 Journal Brain research Date 2026-02-14 Score 72.0

Abstract

Neurodegenerative diseases, like Alzheimer's disease (AD), Parkinson's disease (PD), Huntington's disease (HD), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), and ischemic stroke (IS), are a major global health challenge because of their complex, multifactorial pathology, and the lack of effective disease-modifying therapies. In recent years, aquaculture-derived marine bioactive molecules like fucoidan, phlorotannins, fucoxanthin, laminarin, alginate oligosaccharides, and C-phycocyanin have developed as promising agents for neuroprotection with their structural diversity and multi-target biological activity. This review showcase predominantly preclinical evidence, including in silico molecular docking analyses, in vitro functional assays, and in vivo animal models, to critically understand the receptor-mediated mechanisms with the neuroprotective actions of marine bioactives originated from aquaculture systems. Available studies shows these compounds can modulate large neuro-receptor systems, like cholinergic, dopaminergic, GABAergic, glutamatergic, toll-like, and nuclear receptors, leading in attenuation of oxidative stress, lowering of neuro-inflammation, regulation of neurotransmission, and conservation of mitochondrial and synaptic function. However, the positive approach of mechanistic evidence varies across compounds and receptor classes, with large interactions assisted by functional outcomes instead of direct receptor-binding validation. The review even discusses emerging and enabling technologies like brain organoids, multi-electrode array platforms, omics-based profiling, and artificial intelligence assisted drug discovery, which are increasingly utilized to refine mechanistic understanding and optimize marine-derived products. Importantly, current evidence stay largely preclinical, with little human studies and a lack of validated receptor-specific biomarkers. Overall, this review provides a well-balanced, evidence-based assessment of aquaculture-derived marine bioactive as potential neurotherapeutic agents.