| Literature DB >> 31906278 |
Danja J Den Hartogh1,2, Alessandra Gabriel1, Evangelia Tsiani1,2.
Abstract
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a growing metabolic disease characterized by insulin resistance and hyperglycemia. Current preventative and treatment strategies for T2DM and insulin resistance lack in efficacy resulting in the need for new approaches to prevent and manage/treat the disease better. In recent years, epidemiological studies have suggested that diets rich in fruits and vegetables have beneficial health effects including protection against insulin resistance and T2DM. Curcumin, a polyphenol found in turmeric, and curcuminoids have been reported to have antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, hepatoprotective, nephroprotective, neuroprotective, immunomodulatory and antidiabetic properties. The current review (I of II) summarizes the existing in vitro studies examining the antidiabetic effects of curcumin, while a second (II of II) review summarizes evidence from existing in vivo animal studies and clinical trials focusing on curcumin's antidiabetic properties.Entities:
Keywords: adipose; curcumin; curcuminoids; diabetes; insulin resistance; liver; pancreas; skeletal muscle
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31906278 PMCID: PMC7019345 DOI: 10.3390/nu12010118
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Chemical structure of curcumin and curcuminoids found in turmeric.
Effects of curcumin: in vitro adipocyte studies.
| Cell | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Human adipocytes | 20 µM; 14 days | ↑ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| Human adipocytes | 20 µM; 14 days | ↑ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| Raw 264.7 macrophages and 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10 µM; 24 h | ↓ Macrophage migration | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 20 µM; 20 min and 62 h | ↓ TNFα-activated NF-κB signaling | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 5–20 µM; 24 h | ↓ Adipogenesis | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 5–20 µM; 24 h | ↑ Glucose uptake | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10–50 µM; 8 days | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10–25 µM; 48 h | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| Rabbit subcutaneous adipocytes | 5–20 µM; 24 h | ↑ Cholesterol efflux | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes and human primary preadipocytes | 5–30 µM; 6 days | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 20 µM; 48 h | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes and preadipocytes | 20 µM; 48 h | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10–20 µM; 24 h | ↓ Lipolysis | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10 and 50 µM; 24 h | ↓ LPS-induced leptin levels | [ |
| Bone marrow mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) | 15 µM; 10 days | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| Human adipocytes | 15 µM; 24 h | ↓ Oxidative stress | [ |
| Primary rat adipocytes | 20 µM; 45 min | ↓ Insulin-stimulated glucose uptake | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 20 µM; 24 h | ↓ Cell injury | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10 µM; 48 h | ↓ Lipid accumulation | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10–100 µM; 24–72 h | ↓ Cell viability | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 0–50 µM; 0–24 h | ↓ Glucose uptake | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 10 µg/mL; 24 h | ↑ Lipolysis | [ |
| Primary adipocytes | 20 µM; 8 days | ↓ Adipogenesis | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 20 µM; 72 h | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 25 µM; 30 min | ↓ Lipid accumulation | [ |
| 3T3-L1 and primary adipocytes | 20 µM; 6 days | ↑ Brown fat phenotype | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 20 µM; 24 h | ↑ Glucose metabolism | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 20 µM; 24 h | ↓ Glucose uptake | [ |
| 3T3-L1 adipocytes | 20 µM; 7 days | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
| Primary and mouse brown adipocyte cell (mBAC) adipocytes | 2 µM; 10 h | ↓ WAT inflammation | [ |
| Human bone marrow MSCs | 10 µM; 10 days | ↓ Adipocyte differentiation | [ |
Effects of curcumin: in vitro hepatocyte studies.
| Cell | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hepatic stellate cells | 30 µM; 2 h | ↓ Cell proliferation | [ |
| Primary mice isolated hepatocytes | 25 µM; 120 min | ↓ Hepatic glycogenolysis | [ |
| H4IIE rat hepatoma and Hep3B human hepatoma cells | 2–50 µM; 30 min | ↓ Hepatic gluconeogenesis | [ |
| Hepatic stellate cells | 0–30 µM; 1 h | ↓ HSC activation | [ |
| Isolated rat hepatocytes | 1 and 10 µM; 30 min | 1 µM | [ |
| Rat HSCs and immortalized human hepatocytes | 20 µM; 1 h | ↓ Glucose levels | [ |
| Huh7 cells | 20 µM; 48 h | ↑ PON1 transactivation | [ |
| L02 hepatocytes | - | ↓ Oxidative stress | [ |
| Primary rat hepatocytes | 10 µM; 12 h | ↓ Lipo-apoptosis | [ |
| AML-12 cells | 50 µM; 2 h | ↑ Insulin response | [ |
| Primary rat hepatocytes | 15 µM; 24 h | ↓ Lipid formation | [ |
| HepG2 cells | 30 µM; 2 h | ↓ Cholesterol cell content | [ |
| HepG2 cells | 5–20 µM; 24 h | ↑ Hypolipidemic activity | [ |
| L02 cells | 2.5 and 5 µM; 2 h | ↓ Oxidative stress | [ |
| Primary mice hepatocytes | 25 µM; 6 h | ↓ Glucose production | [ |
| L02 cells | 5 µM; 2 h | ↓ QCT-induced inflammatory response | [ |
| HepG2 cells | 30 µM; 24 h | ↓ Hepatic steatosis | [ |
| Primary mouse hepatocytes | 1 µM; 4 h | ↑ Lipogenesis | [ |
| HepG2 and primary mouse hepatocytes | 2 µM; 6 h | ↓ Fgf21 resistance | [ |
| HepG2 cells | 5 µM; 5 days | ↓ Insulin resistance | [ |
| Human LX-2 HSCs | 40 µM; 24 h | ↓ Fibrotic myofibroblastic phenotype | [ |
| Primary mice hepatocytes | 10 µM; 24 h | ↓ Palmitate-induced steatosis | [ |
| HepG2 cells and primary mice hepatocytes | 10 µM; 30 and 120 min | ↓ Glucose production | [ |
| BRL-3A and HepG2 cells | 2.5 µM; 8 and 12 h | ↓ Fructose-induced inflammation | [ |
| HepG2 cells | 10 µM; 24 h | ↓ Lipotoxicity | [ |
| HepG2 cells | 10 µM; 1 h | ↓ Palmitate-induced inflammatory injury | [ |
Effects of curcumin: in vitro muscle cell studies.
| Cell | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| C2C12 cells | 40 µM; 1 h | ↑ Glucose uptake | [ |
| C2C12 cells | 20 µM; 2 h | ↑ Glucose uptake | [ |
| C2 murine myoblasts | 50 µM; 24 h | ↑ Apoptosis | [ |
| C2C12 cells | 10 µM; 24 h | ↓ Protein degradation | [ |
| C2C12 cells | 40 µM; 1 h | ↓ Inflammation | [ |
| L6myc skeletal muscle cells | 25 µM; 16 h | ↑ GLUT4 translocation | [ |
Effects of curcumin: in vitro pancreatic cell studies.
| Cell | Curcumin Concentration/Duration | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sprague–Dawley rat pancreatic islets | 10 µM; 30 min | ↑ Insulin release | [ |
| MIN6 cells and BALB/c mouse pancreatic islets | 20 µM; 24 h | ↓ Pancreatic cell death | [ |
| C57/BL6J mice pancreatic islets | 10 µM; 24 h | ↑ Islet viability | [ |
| Swiss albino mice pancreatic cells | 10 µM; 24 h | ↑ Islet recovery | [ |
| C57/BL6J mice pancreatic islets | 10 µM; 24 h | ↓ Islet death and dysfunction | [ |
| Human isolated islets | 40 µM; 24 h | ↑ Insulin secretion | [ |
| Rat pancreatic cells | 10 mM; 4 h | ↑ Insulin secretion | [ |
| β-Min6 and HP62 β-cells | 100 pM; 2 h | ↑ Insulin secretion | [ |
| INS-1 cells | 15 µM; 24 h | ↑ Insulin secretion | [ |
| Wistar rat pancreatic islets | 20 µM; 24 h | ↑ Cell viability | [ |
| MIN6 cells | 10 µM; 24 h | ↑ Insulin secretion | [ |
| INS-1 cells | 10:3 weight ratio (22 mg/L); 24 h | ↑ Curcumin cellular uptake | [ |
| Balb/c mice pancreatic islet cells | 12.5 µM; 24 h | ↑ Insulin secretion | [ |
| MIN6 cells | 20 µM; 24 h | ↑ Cell viability | [ |
Figure 2Cellular effects of curcumin on muscle and fat cellular signaling molecules. The figure was created based on the data of the studies [40,41,43,44,45,46,57,67,73,97,98,101,102]. AKT: protein kinase B; PIP3: phosphatidylinositol-3,4,5-triphosphate; PIP2: phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate; ERK: extracellular signal-regulated kinase; PI3K: phosphoinositide 3-kinase; IRS1: insulin receptor substrate 1; TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor- α; AMPK: AMP-activated protein kinase; NF-κB: nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; ACC: acetyl-CoA carboxylase; PGC-1: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma co-activator 1; FFAs: free fatty acids.