Biomedical and Antioxidant Potentialities in Chilli: Perspectives and Way Forward

Molecules. 2022 Sep 27;27(19):6380. doi: 10.3390/molecules27196380.

Abstract

Worldwide, since ages and nowadays, traditional medicine is well known, owing to its biodiversity, which immensely contributed to the advancement and development of complementary and alternative medicines. There is a wide range of spices, herbs, and trees known for their medicinal uses. Chilli peppers, a vegetable cum spice crop, are bestowed with natural bioactive compounds, flavonoids, capsaicinoids, phytochemicals, phytonutrients, and pharmacologically active compounds with potential health benefits. Such compounds manifest their functionality over solo-treatment by operating in synergy and consortium. Co-action of these compounds and nutrients make them potentially effective against coagulation, obesity, diabetes, inflammation, dreadful diseases, such as cancer, and microbial diseases, alongside having good anti-oxidants with scavenging ability to free radicals and oxygen. In recent times, capsaicinoids especially capsaicin can ameliorate important viral diseases, such as SARS-CoV-2. In addition, capsaicin provides an ability to chilli peppers to ramify as topical agents in pain-relief and also benefitting man as a potential effective anesthetic agent. Such phytochemicals involved not only make them useful and a much economical substitute to wonder/artificial drugs but can be exploited as obscene drugs for the production of novel stuffs. The responsibility of the TRPV1 receptor in association with capsaicin in mitigating chronic diseases has also been justified in this study. Nonetheless, medicinal studies pertaining to consumption of chilli peppers are limited and demand confirmation of the findings from animal studies. In this artifact, an effort has been made to address in an accessible format the nutritional and biomedical perspectives of chilli pepper, which could precisely upgrade and enrich our pharmaceutical industries towards human well-being.

Keywords: Capsicum annuum; TRPV1 receptor; anticancer properties; antioxidants; capsaicin; capsaicinoids; health benefits.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Antioxidants / pharmacology
  • COVID-19 Drug Treatment*
  • Capsaicin / pharmacology
  • Capsicum* / chemistry
  • Flavonoids
  • Humans
  • Oxygen
  • SARS-CoV-2

Substances

  • Antioxidants
  • Flavonoids
  • Capsaicin
  • Oxygen

Grants and funding

The authors are thankful to the Cooperative Research Program for Agriculture Science and Technology Development (project No. PJ01701902) Rural Development Administration, Republic of Korea.