| Literature DB >> 31336965 |
Sonia Melino1,2, Sara Leo3, Vilma Toska Papajani4.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) is a socially relevant chronic disease with high prevalence worldwide. DM may lead to several vascular, macrovascular, and microvascular complications (cerebrovascular, coronary artery, and peripheral arterial diseases, retinopathy, neuropathy, and nephropathy), often accelerating the progression of atherosclerosis. Dietary therapy is generally considered to be the first step in the treatment of diabetic patients. Among the current therapeutic options, such as insulin therapy and hypoglycemic drugs, in recent years, attention has been shifting to the effects and properties-that are still not completely known-of medicinal plants as valid and inexpensive therapeutic supports with limited side effects. In this review, we report the relevant effects of medicinal plants and nutraceuticals in diabetes. In particular, we paid attention to the organosulfur compounds (OSCs) present in plant extracts that due to their antioxidant, hypoglycemic, anti-inflammatory, and immunomodulatory effects, can contribute as cardioprotective agents in type 2 DM. OSCs derived from garlic (Allium sp.), due to their properties, can represent a valuable support to the diet in type 2 DM, as outlined in this manuscript based on both in vitro and in vivo studies. Moreover, a relevant characteristic of garlic OSCs is their ability to produce the gasotransmitter H2S, and many of their effects can be explained by this property. Indeed, in recent years, several studies have demonstrated the relevant effects of endogenous and exogenous H2S in human DM, including by in vitro and in vivo experiments and clinical trials; therefore, here, we summarize the effects and the underlying molecular mechanisms of H2S and natural H2S donors.Entities:
Keywords: H2S; OSCs; diabetes; garlic; inflammation; nutraceuticals; oxidative stress; phytochemicals; plants
Year: 2019 PMID: 31336965 PMCID: PMC6682899 DOI: 10.3390/nu11071581
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
The most relevant plants and vegetables and their phytochemicals/nutraceuticals with significant effects on type 2 DM via clinical or in vivo studies.
| Plants/Vegetables Species | Phytochemicals/Nutraceuticals | Effects on Type 2 DM | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| coumarins (umbelliferone β-D-galactopyranoside) alkaloids, and steroids | ↓ PPBG and lipid peroxidation; | [ | |
| OSCs and flavonoids (quercetin and its glycosides) | ↓ FBG and intestinal glucosidase inhibition, serum cholesterol and triacylglycerol and LDL-cholesterol; ↓ blood glucose and lipid levels; | [ | |
| essential oils, coumarins, flavonoids, and phenolic acids | ↓ systolic blood pressure; | [ | |
| Polyphenols: catechins like EGCG, epigallocatechin,epicatechin-3-gallate and epicatechin | ↓ FBG and blood glucose; | [ | |
| cinnamaldehyde, procyanidin oligomers | ↓ FBG, HbA1c, triglyceride, LDL cholesterol and total cholesterol; | [ | |
| triterpenoid, saponin coccinioside, flavonoid glycoside | ↓ levels of the enzymes glucose-6-phosphatase, lactate dehydrogenase; | [ | |
| acidic glycoprotein, coumarins, caffeic acid, and flavonoids | ↓ FBG and HbA1c; | [ | |
| gymnemic acids, gymnema saponins, and gurmarin | ↓ FBG, PPBG and HbA1c of type 2 DM patients; | [ | |
| PUFAs (α-linoleic and linolenic acid), polyphenols, triterpenoids | ↓ fasting blood glucose, HbA1c, triglycerides, total and LDL cholesterol, apolipoprotein B; | [ | |
| cucurbitane triterpenoids, charantin etc. | ↓ FBG and PPBG levels in type 2 DM; ↓ total cholesterol; | [ | |
| Phenols, flavonoids, anthocyanins, alkaloids | ↑ the postprandial glycemic control; | [ | |
| tannins and essential oil (eugenol, methyleugenol, and caryophyllene) | ↓ FBG and PPBG; | [ | |
| flavonoids, phenolic acids, betalains, phytosterol, PUFAs | ↓ PPBG and serum insulin, glucose absorption from the intestine and plasma GIP levels; | [ | |
| triterpene saponins, (ginsenosides, protopanaxadiol and protopanaxatriol- | ↓ FBG and body weight; | [ | |
| polyphenols (mangiferin, catechins, and tannins) | ↓ FBG, HbA1c and lipid levels (cholesterol, LDL, VLDL and triglyceride levels) | [ | |
| flavonolignans (silymarin complex: silybin and isosilybin, silychristin and silydianin), the flavonol taxifolin | ↓ glucose and lipids levels, FBG, HbA1c, total cholesterol, LDL, TG and hepatic enzymes; | [ | |
| steroid saponins (diosgenin, yamogenin, tigogenin), protoalkaloids, trigonelline, 4-hydroxyisoleucin, soluble fiber fraction | ↓ PPBG, FBG, HbA1c, TG, VLDL, lipid; | [ | |
| metabolites ginger oleoresin, 8-gingerol, 10-gingerol and 6-shogaol | ↓ serum glucose, HbA1c and insulin resistance; | [ |
Abbreviations: PPBG = Postprandial blood glucose; FBG = Fast blood glucose; AMPK = activating 5-adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; HbA1c = Glycated hemoglobin; TG = Triglyceride; LDL = Light density lipoprotein; HDL = Hight density lipoprotein; PUFAs = Polyunsaturated fatty acids; GIP = glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide; SOD = Superoxide dismutase; GPx = Glutathione peroxidase; eNOS = endothelial nitric oxide synthase; SGLT1 = Sodium glucose transporter protein 1; VEGF = Vascular endothelial growth factor; BMI = Body mass index; ↓ = decrease; ↑ = increase.
Figure 1Scheme of the effects of organosulfur compounds (OSCs) derived from Allium sp.
Figure 2Scheme of the inter-relationship between hyperglycemia, iperlipidemia, oxidative stress, vascular inflammation, and the ability of garlic extract to modulate macrovascular and microvascular complications in type 2 DM [139,149,150,151]. Abbreviations: DM = Diabetes mellitus; P13k/Akt = phosphoinositide-3-kinase/Protein Kinase B; IRs = Insulin Receptors; SAC = S-allyl cysteine; allicin = dyallil thiosulfinate; SAMG = S-allylmercaptoglutatione; SAMC = S-allylmercaptocysteine; NO = Nitric oxide; IL-6 = Interleukin 6; TNF-α = Tumor necrosis factor; NK cells, Natural killer cells; GST = Glutathione-S-transferase; GSH = Glutathione reduced; SOD = Superoxide dismutase; GPx = Glutathione peroxidase; eNOS = endothelial Nitric oxide synthase.
Figure 3Scheme of the spontaneous OSCs production from garlic.
Figure 4Scheme of the enzymatic (A) and non-enzymatic (B) production of H2S in mammalian cells. The figure B displays the non-enzymatic production of H2S starting from DADS that reacts with GSH through a nucleophilic substitution at the α-carbon. Abbreviations: CBS = cystathionine β-synthase; CSE = cystathionine γ-lyase; 3-MP = 3-mercaptopyruvate; GSH = reduced glutathione; GSSG = oxidized glutathione; GSSH = glutathione persulfide; = allyl-thiol; = S-allyl-glutathione; = allyl-glutathione disulfide.
Figure 5(A) Scheme of the effects and pathway activation of H2S-donors in cell: Akt activation, Erk1/2 activation, Ang-1 upregulation, NF-kB sulfidration, Nrf2 activation by sulfidration of Keep1 and upregulation of CBS, CSE and antioxidant enzyme (NQO1, HO1, etc.), opening KATP channels; (B) effects of H2S on insulin release under hyperglycemic conditions ( inhibition) at late stage of diabetes in beta cells: upregulation of CSE and CBS ; MST ; closure of L-type voltage-dependent Ca2C channels , opening of KATP channels , and hyperpolarization.