This review aims to comprehensively examine spent coffee grounds (SCGs) as a sustainable source of antioxidant and immunomodulatory bioactives, with a specific focus on their capacity to modulate membrane-level signaling through ion channels and G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) in the context of lifestyle-related chronic diseases. SCGs, the major solid by-product of coffee brewing, represent an underutilized yet highly abundant source of bioactive compounds, including chlorogenic acids, phenolic acids, melanoidins, diterpenes, and residual alkaloids. Lifestyle-related chronic diseases, including type 2 diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease, and chronic inflammatory disorders, are increasingly recognized as immunometabolic conditions driven by persistent low-grade inflammation, redox imbalance, and dysregulated membrane signaling. This review synthesizes current evidence demonstrating that bioactives contained in SCG extracts exert antioxidant and immunomodulatory effects that extend beyond radical scavenging. Crucially, these compounds also act as modulators of membrane-level signaling, representing a mechanistic perspective that has not been previously integrated for SCGs in the context of chronic disease. The different extraction methodologies and the obtained results are evaluated with the aim to identify the most effective experimental approach and extraction conditions. The paper also discusses how SCG compounds regulate redox-sensitive ion channels (including calcium channels, TRP channels, and potassium channels), and key GPCR pathways (such as GPR120, GPR43, and adenosine receptors), thereby influencing immune cell activation, cytokine production, insulin signaling, and metabolic inflammation. Particular attention is given to the role of microbial fermentation and enzymatic processing in enhancing SCG bioavailability, generating postbiotic metabolites that further engage GPCR–ion channel crosstalk. By integrating extraction approaches, antioxidant chemistry, immunology, membrane signaling, and nutritional metabolism, this review positions SCG as a sustainable functional ingredient capable of restoring immune tolerance and metabolic homeostasis. These insights support the valorization of SCGs within the circular economy framework and highlight their potential application in next-generation immunonutrition strategies for chronic disease prevention and management.
Spent Coffee Grounds Extracts: a Sustainable Source of Antioxidant and Immunomodulatory Bioactives for managing Lifestyle-Related Chronic Diseases / Hasna, A., Anasthasya Tansy, B., Maulana, A., Harahap, ., Bagus Adi Cahyono, M., Hadinata, E., Tjandrawinata, R., Nurkolis, F., De Luca, L., Basile, G., Romano, R., Santini, A.. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR SCIENCES. - ISSN 1422-0067. - 27:11 4980(2026). [10.3390/ijms27114980]
Spent Coffee Grounds Extracts: a Sustainable Source of Antioxidant and Immunomodulatory Bioactives for managing Lifestyle-Related Chronic Diseases
Giulia Basile;Raffaele Romano;Antonello Santini
2026
Abstract
This review aims to comprehensively examine spent coffee grounds (SCGs) as a sustainable source of antioxidant and immunomodulatory bioactives, with a specific focus on their capacity to modulate membrane-level signaling through ion channels and G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) in the context of lifestyle-related chronic diseases. SCGs, the major solid by-product of coffee brewing, represent an underutilized yet highly abundant source of bioactive compounds, including chlorogenic acids, phenolic acids, melanoidins, diterpenes, and residual alkaloids. Lifestyle-related chronic diseases, including type 2 diabetes, obesity, cardiovascular disease, and chronic inflammatory disorders, are increasingly recognized as immunometabolic conditions driven by persistent low-grade inflammation, redox imbalance, and dysregulated membrane signaling. This review synthesizes current evidence demonstrating that bioactives contained in SCG extracts exert antioxidant and immunomodulatory effects that extend beyond radical scavenging. Crucially, these compounds also act as modulators of membrane-level signaling, representing a mechanistic perspective that has not been previously integrated for SCGs in the context of chronic disease. The different extraction methodologies and the obtained results are evaluated with the aim to identify the most effective experimental approach and extraction conditions. The paper also discusses how SCG compounds regulate redox-sensitive ion channels (including calcium channels, TRP channels, and potassium channels), and key GPCR pathways (such as GPR120, GPR43, and adenosine receptors), thereby influencing immune cell activation, cytokine production, insulin signaling, and metabolic inflammation. Particular attention is given to the role of microbial fermentation and enzymatic processing in enhancing SCG bioavailability, generating postbiotic metabolites that further engage GPCR–ion channel crosstalk. By integrating extraction approaches, antioxidant chemistry, immunology, membrane signaling, and nutritional metabolism, this review positions SCG as a sustainable functional ingredient capable of restoring immune tolerance and metabolic homeostasis. These insights support the valorization of SCGs within the circular economy framework and highlight their potential application in next-generation immunonutrition strategies for chronic disease prevention and management.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


