Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 671: Edible Bird’s Nest as a Multi-Component Functional Food for Brain Aging: From Single-Bioactive Actions to Network-Regulatory Mechanisms

Nutrients, Vol. 18, Pages 671: Edible Bird’s Nest as a Multi-Component Functional Food for Brain Aging: From Single-Bioactive Actions to Network-Regulatory Mechanisms

Nutrients doi: 10.3390/nu18040671

Authors:
Wenjuan Gong
Xintong Wang
Wen Zhang
Huihui Wang
Wei Xiong
Yixuan Li
Pengcheng Wen
Yanan Sun

Functional food research has long emphasized isolated bioactive compounds, yet such single-target strategies often show limited efficacy against complex, multifactorial processes such as brain aging. In this review, we examine edible bird’s nest (EBN) as a representative multi-component functional food and discuss how its complex food matrix may exert coordinated neuroprotective effects. We summarize the major bioactive constituents of EBN, including sialic acid, functional glycoproteins, and bioactive peptides, and organize their actions into functional modules related to oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, apoptosis, synaptic maintenance, and neurotrophic support. Emerging evidence on the prebiotic potential of EBN and its modulation of the gut–brain axis is also integrated, highlighting interactions between peripheral metabolic regulation and central nervous system function. By comparing EBN with conventional functional ingredients such as vitamins C and E, coenzyme Q10, curcumin, and omega-3 fatty acids, we propose that EBN represents a distinctive “network-regulatory” food system in which nutritional support and pathway modulation are intrinsically linked. Overall, this review provides a conceptual framework for understanding how complex food matrices can be rationally applied to support brain health and reduce age-related neurodegenerative risk.

​Functional food research has long emphasized isolated bioactive compounds, yet such single-target strategies often show limited efficacy against complex, multifactorial processes such as brain aging. In this review, we examine edible bird’s nest (EBN) as a representative multi-component functional food and discuss how its complex food matrix may exert coordinated neuroprotective effects. We summarize the major bioactive constituents of EBN, including sialic acid, functional glycoproteins, and bioactive peptides, and organize their actions into functional modules related to oxidative stress, neuroinflammation, apoptosis, synaptic maintenance, and neurotrophic support. Emerging evidence on the prebiotic potential of EBN and its modulation of the gut–brain axis is also integrated, highlighting interactions between peripheral metabolic regulation and central nervous system function. By comparing EBN with conventional functional ingredients such as vitamins C and E, coenzyme Q10, curcumin, and omega-3 fatty acids, we propose that EBN represents a distinctive “network-regulatory” food system in which nutritional support and pathway modulation are intrinsically linked. Overall, this review provides a conceptual framework for understanding how complex food matrices can be rationally applied to support brain health and reduce age-related neurodegenerative risk. Read More

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