| Literature DB >> 32485837 |
Estefanía Márquez Campos1, Linda Jakobs1, Marie-Christine Simon1.
Abstract
Diet is one of the pillars in the prevention and management of diabetes mellitus. Particularly, eating patterns characterized by a high consumption of foods such as fruits or vegetables and beverages such as coffee and tea could influence the development and progression of type 2 diabetes. Flavonoids, whose intake has been inversely associated with numerous negative health outcomes in the last few years, are a common constituent of these food items. Therefore, they could contribute to the observed positive effects of certain dietary habits in individuals with type 2 diabetes. Of all the different flavonoid subclasses, flavan-3-ols are consumed the most in the European region. However, a large proportion of the ingested flavan-3-ols is not absorbed. Therefore, the flavan-3-ols enter the large intestine where they become available to the colonic bacteria and are metabolized by the microbiota. For this reason, in addition to the parent compounds, the colonic metabolites of flavan-3-ols could take part in the prevention and management of diabetes. The aim of this review is to present the available literature on the effect of both the parent flavan-3-ol compounds found in different food sources as well as the specific microbial metabolites of diabetes in order to better understand their potential role in the prevention and treatment of the disease.Entities:
Keywords: catechins; diabetes; flavonoids; polyphenol
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32485837 PMCID: PMC7352288 DOI: 10.3390/nu12061592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Potential molecular mechanisms underlying the antidiabetic properties of flavan-3-ols. ↑: increase; ↓: decrease; Akt: protein kinase B; AMPK: 5’ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; G-6-Pase: glucose-6-phosphatase; GLUT4: glucose transporter type 4; GS: glycogen synthase; GSK3: glycogen synthase kinase 3; hIAPP: human islet amyloid polypeptide; IKK: IκB kinase; IR: insulin receptor; IRS-1: insulin receptor substrate 1; JNK: c-Jun N-terminal kinases; mRNA: messenger RNA; PEPCK: phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase; PI3K: phosphoinositide 3-kinase; PKC: protein kinase C; PPARγ: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ; PTP1B: protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B.
In vitro studies on antidiabetic effect of flavan-3-ols and their microbial metabolites 1.
| In Vitro Test | Flavan-3-ol | Concentration/Dose | Results | Ref. |
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| Inhibition of α-glucosidase and α-amylase activity | GTE, GTP, EGCG | α-amylase: IC50 = 1370.812 ± 59.081–1849.612 ± 73.475 µg/mL | Inhibition of α-glucosidase by GTE was stronger than by acarbose (IC50 = 4822.783 ± 26.042 µg/mL) and the other compounds but had no effect on α-amylase. | [ |
| Combination of GTE, GTP, EGCG, and acarbose at low concentrations had synergistic suppressive effects on α-glucosidase. | ||||
| α-amylase was inhibited at high concentrations of GTP and EGCG, but lower than that of acarbose (IC50 = 2715.654 ± 24.709 µg/mL). | ||||
| Inhibition of α-amylase and α-glucosidase activity | GSE, tea extracts, C, EC, EGC, EGCG, GCG, ECG | α-amylase: IC50 = 8.7 ± 0.8–378 ± 134 µg/L | α-amylase was only inhibited by GTE extract similarly to acarbose. | [ |
| α-glucosidase was significantly inhibited by all compounds except C, EC following this order: Teavigo® > EGCG > GTE> GSE > GCG > WTE > ECG | ||||
| Inhibition of α-glucosidase activity | EGCG, ECG, EGCG3”Me, ECG3”Me | IC50 = 8.1−61.1 µM | Inhibition of α-glucosidase EGCG3”Me > EGCG > ECG3”Me > ECG | [ |
| α-glucosidase inhibition assay | C | IC50 = 87.55 µg/mL | The α-glucosidase inhibitory potency was greater than acarbose (IC50 = 199.53 µg/mL). | [ |
| Inhibition of α-glucosidase activity | Procyanidins B2, B5 and C1 | IC50 = 4.7 ± 0.2, 5.5 ± 0.1 and 3.8 ± 0.2 µg/mL | Trimeric procyanidin (C1) exerted the strongest inhibitory activity. Inhibitory effect was stronger than for acarbose (130.0 ± 20.0 µg/mL). | [ |
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| Glucose uptake assay and insulin signaling pathway in HepG2 cells treated with PA | Theaflavin mixture (TF, TF-3-G, TF-3′-G, and TFDG) | 2.5–10 μg/mL | Increased 2-NBDG uptake. Increased membrane bound GLUT4 protein level and Akt phosphorylation. Decreased IRS-1 phosphorylation at Ser307. Increase of mtDNA copy number. Downregulation of PGC-1β mRNA level and increase of PRC mRNA expression. | [ |
| GLUT1-mediated uptake of 3- | EGCG and ECG | - | Uptake of 0.1 mM 3MG was dose-dependently inhibited. | [ |
| Glucose uptake, GLUT4 translocation, and JNK phosphorylation in insulin resistant 3T3-L1 adipocytes | EGCG | 0.1–5 µM | At 5 µM, increased glucose uptake. Dose-dependent reversion of Dex- and TNFα-induced JNK phosphorylation. At 1 µM, increased GLUT4 translocation. | [ |
| GLUT4 translocation in L6 skeletal muscle cells | 5-(3,5-dihydroxyphenyl)-γ-VL | 1 and 3 µM | 3 µM promoted the strongest effect on GLUT4 translocation. | [ |
| Glucose transport in human and murine 3T3-L1 adipocytes stimulated or not with insulin | PCA | 100 µmol/L | Reversion of oxLDL-induced decrease in glucose uptake and GLUT4 translocation. Reversion of oxLDL-induced decrease of adiponectin mRNA expression and secretion, and of PPARγ mRNA expression and activity. | [ |
| Insulin signaling, glucose uptake, and glucose production in rat renal NRK-52E cells | EC, 2,3-DHB, 3,4-DHPA, 3-HPP and VA | 5–20 µM | Glucose uptake, glucose production, and PEPCK reduced after treatment with EC (5–20 µM) and 2,3-DBH (20 µM). | [ |
| IR and IRS-1 phosphorylated and total protein levels increased at 10 µM EC and 20 µM 2,3-DHB. Increased phosphorylation of Akt and GSK3. The inhibition of the PI3K/Akt pathway was restrained. | ||||
| Insulin signaling and glucose uptake and production in rat renal NRK-52E cells treated with high glucose | EC, 3,4-DHPA, 2,3-DHB and 3-HPP | 5–20 µM | The altered glucose uptake and production caused by high glucose was prevented by EC (5–20 µM) and 3,4-DHPA (10–20 µM). At 10 µM, tyrosine phosphorylated, and total levels of IR increased. The PI3K/Akt pathway and AMPK were activated and the PEPCK expression was reduced. | [ |
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| GSIS in INS-1 cell. [Ca2+] oscillations induced by glucose in INS-1 cells | EGCG, GCG, EC, C, EGC, GC, ECG, CG | 10–100 μM | GSIS was decreased by 10 and 30 μM EGCG. GSIS was terminated by 100 μM EGCG and 100 μM GCG. EGC nearly abolished GSIS at 100 μM, GC and ECG partly inhibited it. EC, C, and CG did not show any effect. 100 μM EGCG decreased the oscillation of intracellular calcium. | [ |
| GSIS in SFA-treated INS-1 cell; ROS production in high-glucose and H2O2-treated INS-1 cell | EC | 0.3 μmol/L 30 µmol/L | Increase of GSIS. | [ |
| Insulin production in iron-loaded RINm5F pancreatic cells. Iron and ROS levels in RINm5F pancreatic cells | GTE | 1–20 µM EGCG | Dose-dependent increase of insulin secretion. | [ |
| Dose-dependent decrease of iron and ROS levels. | ||||
| Cell viability and GSIS in PA- and H2O2-treated INS-1 pancreatic beta cells. H2O2-stimulated ROS production | Cinnam-tannin B1, procyanidin C1, cinnam-tannin D1 | 12.5–100 μmol/L | Dose-dependent increase of cell viability. | [ |
| GSIS increase at 25 µmol/L. | ||||
| Decreased ROS production. | ||||
| Inhibition of hIAPP aggregation and molecular mechanism | EGCG | - | Blockage of inter-peptide hydrophobic/aromatic interactions and intra-peptide interactions. | [ |
| Abolishment of β-hairpin-containing three-stranded β-sheet conformation. | ||||
| Shift of hIAPP dimer toward loosely packed coil-rich conformations. | ||||
| Amyloid formation by IAPP and disaggregation of amyloid fibrils with thioflavin-T binding assay and TEM. Cell viability in mixture IAPP:EGCG on rat INS-1 | EGCG | 3.2–32 µM | At 32 µM, inhibition of amyloid formation by IAPP. IAPP:EGCG (3.2 µM) complex did not seed amyloid formation by IAPP. Disaggregation of IAPP. Increased cell viability of INS-1 cells to 77%. | [ |
| hIAPP fibrillation and aggregation | EGCG | 2–32 µM | Inhibition of hIAPP fibrillation. | [ |
| Formation of amorphous aggregates instead of ordered fibrils. | ||||
| Beta cell function of rat INS-1E pancreatic beta cells and rat pancreatic islets | 3,4-DHPA, 2,3-DHB and 3-HPP | 1–5 µM | 3,4-DHPA and 3-HPP enhanced GSIS (5 and 1 µM, respectively). Under oxidative stress, 3,4-DHPA and 3-HPP reduced ROS and carbonyl group production, and GSIS returned to control levels. PKC and ERKs phosphorylation improved. | [ |
| Beta cell function of Min6 pancreatic beta cells incubated with cholesterol | 3,4-DHPA | 10–250 µM | 3,4-DHPA reversed the diminished insulin secretion induced by cholesterol. It protected beta cells against apoptosis, oxidative stress, and mitochondrial dysfunction. | [ |
| Beta cell function and glucose utilization in rat INS-1 beta cells and human skeletal muscle | EC, HA, HVA and 5-PVA | 5–100 µM | EC (10 and 25 µM), HA, and 5-PVA (25 µM) provoked glucose oxidation in skeletal muscle. After oxidative insult, skeletal mitochondrial function was conserved. In beta cells, EC (100 µM) and metabolites (5–100 µM) stimulated GSIS. | [ |
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| Glucose production and PEPCK/G-6-Pase gene expression in H4IIE rat hepatoma cells incubated with pyruvate and lactate | EGCG | 12.5–100 µM | At 25 µM, glucose production was repressed comparable to that of insulin. | [ |
| Dose-dependent reduction of PEPCK mRNA as well as G-6-Pase. PI3K inhibitor LY 294,002 reversed the repression of EGCG on PEPCK and G-6-Pase gene expression. | ||||
| Gluconeogenesis and PEPCK/G-6-Pase gene expression in mouse cAMP-Dex-stimulated hepatocytes | EGCG | 0.25–1 µM | Dose-dependent attenuation of gluconeogenesis. Expression of PEPCK and G-6-Pase genes was blocked. | [ |
| Activation of AMPK mediated by CaMKK and ROS-dependent. | ||||
| Gluconeogenesis pathway in palmitate-induced insulin resistant HepG2 cells | EGCG | 40 μM | Expression of PEPCK and G-6-Pase was reduced by 53% and 67%, respectively. Glucose production was reduced by 50%. | [ |
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| Plasma membrane potential and GLP-1 secretion in STC-1 cells under basal and nutrient-stimulated conditions | GSPE | 0.05–50 mg/L | At 0.05 and 0.5 mg/L, membrane depolarization. At 50 mg/L, hyperpolarization and suppression of GLP-1 secretion. | [ |
| Under nutrient-stimulation, 50 mg/L limited membrane depolarization and reduced GLP-1 secretion. | ||||
| Insulin-stimulated glycogen synthesis and lipogenesis in high-glucose treated human hepatoma HepG2 cells | GTP (60% EGCG) | 0.1–10 µM | Enhanced glycogen synthesis, increased phosphorylation of Ser9 GSK3ß and Ser641 GS. | [ |
| Inhibition of lipogenesis through enhanced expression of phosphorylated AMPKα and acetyl CoA carboxylase. | ||||
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| TNFα-induced activation of NF-κB, MAPKs, AP-1, and PPARγ in differentiated white 3T3-L1 adipocytes | EC | 0.5–10 µM | Dose-dependent decrease of JNK, ERK1/2, and | [ |
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| Vasodilation of pre-contracted isolated rat aortic rings | 3-PP, 4-HPP, 3,4-DHPP, 4-HPA, 3,4-DHPA, HVA, 3-HB, PhG, 4-MC, | 100 nM | 3-HPP had the strongest vasodilatory activity, which was NO and endothelium-dependent. | [ |
| NO production by human aortic endothelial cells under glucotoxic conditions | 3-HPP | 1 µM | Insulin-stimulated increase in NO production was preserved, as well as phosphorylation of Akt and eNOS. The increase in ROS and RNS was prevented. | [ |
| Endothelial function in human EA.hy926 endothelial cells | 3,4-DHPA, 2,3-DHB and 3-HPP | 10–12 µM | 3,4-DHPA and a mixture of the metabolites increased the NO generation and phosphorylation of eNOS, Akt, and AMPK. Under oxidative stress, cell viability was improved by the metabolites and reduced eNOS phosphorylation was reversed. ROS generation and phosphorylation of ERK and JNK were reversed. | [ |
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| AGEs formation in BSA/glucose system and glyoxal trapping ability | PG, 3,4-DHPP, DHFA, 3-HPA, 3,4-DHPA and HVA | 2–50 µmol/L | DHFA at 10 μmol/L significantly inhibited albumin glycation. At 2 µmol/L, a mix of 3-HPA, 3,4-DHPA, and HVA inhibited glycation. PG, 3,4-DHPP, and 3,4-DHPA had a glyoxal trapping ability of 60%, 90%, and 65%, respectively. | [ |
| AGEs formation in BSA/glucose and BSA/MGO systems | 3,4-DHPA, 3-HPA and HVA | 1 mM | The order of AGEs’ inhibition ability was: rutin > quercetin > 3,4-DHPA > aminoguanidine > 3-HPA > HVA | [ |
1 2-NBDG: 2-(N-(7-nitrobenz-2-oxa-1,3-diazol-4-yl)amino)-2-deoxyglucose; Akt: protein kinase B; AMPK: 5’ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; AP-1: activator protein 1; CaMK: Ca2+/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase; CaMKK: calcium/calmodulin-dependent protein kinase kinase; cAMP: cyclic adenosine monophosphate; Dex: dexamethasone; ERK: extracellular signal–regulated kinases; G-6-Pase: glucose-6-phosphatase; GLP-1: glucagon-like peptide-1; GLUT1: glucose transporter type 1; GLUT4: glucose transporter type 4; GSE: grape seed extract; GS: glycogen synthase; GSIS: glucose-stimulated insulin secretion; GSK3ß: glycogen synthase kinase 3 beta; GSPE: grape seed procyanidin extract; GTE: green tea extract; GTP: green tea polyphenol mixture; hIAPP: human islet amyloid polypeptide; IAPP: islet amyloid polypeptide; IC50: half maximal inhibitory concentration; IL: interleukin; IR: insulin receptor; IRS-1: insulin receptor substrate 1; JNK: c-Jun N-terminal kinases; MAPK: mitogen-activated protein kinase; MCP-1: monocyte chemoattractant protein 1; mtDNA: mitochondrial DNA; NAC: N-acetylcysteine; NF-κB: nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; oxLDL: oxidized LDL; PA: palmitic acid; PEPCK: phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase; PGC-1: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor coactivator-1; PI3K: phosphoinositide 3-kinase; PKC: protein kinase C; PPARγ: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ; PRC: PGC-1-related coactivator; PTP1B: protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B; ROS: reactive oxygen species; SFA: saturated fatty acid; SOD: superoxide dismutase; STC: secretin tumor cell; TEM: transmission electron microscopy; TNFα: tumor necrosis factor; WTE: white tea extract. Flavan-3-ols and microbial metabolites: 2,3-DHB: 2,3-dihydroxybenzoic acid; 3-HB: 3-hydroxybenzoic acid; 3-HPA: 3-hydroxyphenylacetic acid; 3-HPP: 3-hydroxyphenyl propionic acid; 3-PP: 3-phenylpropionic acid; 3,4-DHPA: 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic-acid; 3,4-DHPP: 3,4-dihydroxyphenyl propionic acid; 4-HPA: 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid; 4-MC: 4-methylcatechol; 5-PVA: 5-phenylvaleric acid; C: catechin; CG: catechin gallate; DHFA: dihydroferulic acid; EC: epicatechin; ECG: epicatechin gallate; ECG3”Me: epicatechin-3-O-(3-O-methyl) gallate; EGC: epigallocatechin; EGCG: epigallocatechin gallate; EGCG3”Me: epigallocatechin-3-O-(3-O-methyl) gallate; GC: gallocatechin; GCG: gallocatechin gallate; HA: hippuric acid; HVA: homovanillic acid; m-CoA: m-coumaric acid; PCA: protocatechuic acid; PhG: phloroglucinol; PG: pyrogallol; TF: theaflavin; TF-3-G: theaflavin-3-gallate; TF-3′-G: theaflavin-3′-gallate; TFDG: theaflavin-3,3′-digallate; VA: valeric acid; VL: valerolactone.
In vivo studies on antidiabetic effects of flavan-3-ols and their microbial metabolites 2.
| In Vivo Model | Treatment | Dose/Route/Period | Results | Ref. |
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| Inhibition of α-amylase activity in mice. | High vs. low DP proanthocyanidins | 150 mg/kg/day. Oral. 56 days. | High DP proanthocyanidins had a stronger inhibition rate of digestive enzyme activity than the low DP group (0.20 ± 0.03 vs. 0.27 ± 0.06 U mg/prot in small intestine, 0.26 ± 0.04 vs. 0.35 ± 0.04 U mg/prot in pancreas) | [ |
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| GLUT4 translocation in ICR mice. GLUT4 translocation in C57BL/6 mice. | CLP (EC, C, procyanidin) | 250 mg/kg. Oral. Single dose. | Enhanced GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle of ICR mice after a single dose following glucose load. | [ |
| Enhanced GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle of C57BL/6 mice after consecutive administration of CLP. | ||||
| GLUT-4 expression and JNK phosphorylation in KK-Ay mice. | GTP | 150–300 mg/kg/day. Oral. 4 weeks. | Decreased glucose levels and enhanced glucose tolerance. JNK phosphorylation in adipose tissues was reduced and GLUT4 expression was increased. ROS content was reduced. | [ |
| OGTT and GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle of ICR mice. AMPK activation in ICR mice. | CLP and high vs. low DP pro-cyanidins | 10 mg/kg. Oral. Single dose. | Reduction of plasma glucose levels after OGTT. Promotion of GLUT4 translocation by high and low DP procyanidins. Activation of AMPK-signaling pathway. Increased phosphorylation of IRβ, IRS-1, and P13K in muscle. Low-DP increased phosphorylation of Akt. | [ |
| Increased insulin secretion in plasma. | ||||
| GLUT4 translocation in skeletal muscle of ICR mice. Activation of insulin and AMPK signaling pathways in ICR mice soleus muscle. | EC, Procyanidin B2, Procya-nidin C1, PA4-1 and cinnamtannin A2 | 10 μg/kg. Oral. Single dose. | Reduction of hyperglycemia after an OGTT. Increase of GLUT4 translocation. | [ |
| Promotion of AMPK, PI3K, and Akt phosphorylation. | ||||
| Glucose uptake in STZ-induced T1D Wistar/ST rats. Glucose uptake in KK-Ay mice. | GTE (C, EC, GC, EGC, CG, ECG, GCG, EGCG and caffeine) | 2 g/L. Oral. 12 d. 2 g/L. Oral. 63 days vs. 42 days. | Significantly lower blood glucose level after OGTT. Increased GLUT4 translocation. Reduction in STZ-induced increase in plasma fructosamine and HbA1c. | [ |
| Significantly lower blood glucose level after OGTT. Increased GLUT4 translocation. Reduced fructosamine and HbA1c concentration. | ||||
| Glucose intolerance of HFD-induced obese and diabetic C57BL/6 mice. | EGCG | 75 mg/kg. Oral. Single dose. | Blood glucose increased until 15 min (30 min in control), and rapidly decreased thereafter. It was significantly lower than in control group. | [ |
| Insulin sensitivity in HFD-induced obese and diabetic C57BL/6 mice. | EC | 20 mg/kg. Oral. 15 weeks. | Increase of insulin was prevented. Phosphorylation of IRS-1 and Akt was increased, while that of PKC, JNK, IKK, and PTP1B was downregulated. | [ |
| IRes and effect on insulin signaling cascade in HFr-fed rats. | EC | 20 mg/kg. Oral. 8 weeks. | Reversion of impaired activation of IR, IRS-1, Akt, and ERK1/2 induced by HFr diet. Reversion of upregulation of PKC, IKK, JNK, and PTP1B induced by HFr. Inhibition of HFr-induced increase of expression and activation of NADPH oxidase, expression of cytokines and chemokines, and activation of redox-sensitive signals. | [ |
| Plasma glucose level in ICR mice during OGTT and GLUT4 translocation of soleus muscle. | 5-(3,5-dihydroxy-phenyl)-γ-VL | 32 mg/kg. Oral. Single dose. | Suppression of postprandial hyperglycemia at 15 and 30 min after OGTT. Increased GLUT4 translocation. Increased phosphorylation of AMPK. | [ |
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| Glycemia, insulin, and HbA1c glycation on nicotinamide and STZ-induced diabetic rats. | EGCG | 2 mg/kg. Oral. 15 days. | Glucose, HbA1c, and HOMA-IR decreased. Insulin increased. | [ |
| Insulin synthesis and apoptosis in male Wistar cafeteria-induced obese rats. | GSPE | 25 mg/kg. Oral. 21 days. | Decreased HOMA-IR and HOMA-ß. | [ |
| Decreased expression of Cpe. | ||||
| Increase in Bax protein levels. | ||||
| IRes, insulin clearance, and serum lipids in NAFLD C57BL/6 mice. | EGCG | 10, 20, 40 mg/kg/day. i.p. 4 weeks. | Reduction of fasting blood glucose and serum insulin. Decrease of GSIS was dose-dependently reversed. Metabolic clearance rate of insulin and IDE increased. Dose-dependent decrease of serum TC, TG, and LDL. Dose-dependent increase of serum HDL. | [ |
| Antidiabetic effects in a | EGCG | 10 g/kg diet, 1% ( | After an OGTT, fasting blood glucose levels decreased similarly to rosiglitazone. No changes in HOMA-IR or QUICKI. Increase in number and size of pancreatic islets comparable to rosiglitazone. | [ |
| hIAPP amyloidogenesis in hIAPP transgenic mice | EGCG | 0.4 mg/mL. Oral. 3 weeks. | Reduction of amyloid fibril intensity of hIAPP in the pancreas of non-diabetic transgenic mice. | [ |
| Development of T1D and protective effect on pancreatic islets in NOD mice. | EGCG | 0.05% in drinking water. Oral. 32 weeks. | Delayed onset of T1D. Increased plasma insulin levels compared to control. Decreased HbA1c. Increased concentration of cytokine IL-10 level. Increased islet viability when exposed to pro-inflammatory cytokines. | [ |
| Immunity modulation and prevention of T1D in NOD mice. | EC | 0.5% in drinking water. | Prevention of T1D onset. Blood glucose levels decreased within the first 60 min of OGTT. HbA1c concentration reduced compared to control group. | [ |
| Plasma insulin levels were higher than in untreated group. Pancreatic islet mass improved. High proportion of immune cell-free islets. Enhanced plasma IL-10 and IL-12 levels. | ||||
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| Plasma GLP-1 in ICR mice. | High vs. low DP pro-cyanidins | 10 mg/kg. Oral. Single dose. | Increased GLP-1 secretion in plasma. | [ |
| GLP-1 and plasma insulin levels in male ICR mice. | Cinnam-tannin A2 | 10 µg/kg. Oral. Single dose. | Increase of plasma insulin level. Increase of GLP-1 secretion levels in plasma 60 min after administration. | [ |
| Increased phosphorylation of IRß and IRS-1 in vitro in skeletal muscle. | ||||
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| Oxidative damage and serum lipid profile in STZ-induced diabetic rats. | C | 20–80 mg/kg/day. i.p. 4 weeks. | Dose-dependent decrease of blood glucose levels. Dose-dependent increase of SOD, GST, and CAT activity. Dose-dependent decrease of TC, TG, LDL, and apoB. Dose-dependent increase of HDL and apo A-I. | [ |
| Serum glucose levels and serum and hepatic biomarkers of oxidative stress in STZ-induced diabetic rats. | GTE | 100 and 200 mg/kg. Oral. 4 weeks. | Decreased serum glucose levels, as well as serum and hepatic MDA concentration with 200 mg/kg for 4 weeks. TAC increased. | [ |
2 Akt: protein kinase B; AMPK: 5’ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; Apo: apoprotein; Bax: Bcl-2-associated X protein; bw: body weight; CAT: catalase; CLP: cacao liquor procyanidin; Cpe: carboxypeptidase E; d: day; DP: degree of polymerization; ERK: extracellular signal–regulated kinases; GLP-1: glucagon-like peptide-1; GLUT4: glucose transporter type 4; GSIS: glucose-stimulated insulin secretion; GSPE: grape seed procyanidin extract; GST: glutathione-S-transferase; GTE: green tea extract; GTP: green tea polyphenol mixture; HbA1c: glycated hemoglobin; HDL: high density lipoprotein-cholesterol; hIAPP: human islet amyloid polypeptide; HFD: high fat diet; HFr: high fructose; HOMA-IR: homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance; HOMA-ß: homeostasis model assessment of beta cell function; i.p.: intraperitoneal; ICR: Institute of Cancer Research; IDE: insulin-degrading enzyme; IL: interleukin; IKK: IκB kinase; IR: insulin receptor; IRes: insulin resistance; IRS-1: insulin receptor substrate 1; JNK: c-Jun N-terminal kinases; LDL: low density lipoprotein-cholesterol; MDA: malondialdehyde; NAFLD: non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; NADPH: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate; NOD: non-obese diabetic; OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test; PI3K: phosphoinositide 3-kinase; PKC: protein kinase C; PTP1B: protein-tyrosine phosphatase 1B; SOD: superoxide dismutase; STZ: streptozotocin; TAC: total antioxidant capacity; T1D: type 1 diabetes; TC: total cholesterol; TG: triglycerides; QUICKI: quantitative insulin sensitivity check index; w: week. Flavan-3-ols and their microbial metabolites: C: catechin; CG: catechin gallate; EC: epicatechin; ECG: epicatechin gallate; EGC: epigallocatechin; EGCG: epigallocatechin gallate; GC: gallocatechin; GCG: gallocatechin gallate; PA4-1: EC-(4β–6)-EC-(4β–8)-EC-(4β–8)-EC; VL: valerolactone.
Human clinical trials on antidiabetic effect of flavan-3-ols 3.
| Intervention | Study Design | Population | Duration | Parameter | Results | Ref. |
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| 500 mg EGCG/day (one capsule/day) Control: 500 mg starch powder/day (one capsule/day) | CT, pc, d-b | Until child’s birth | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, QUICKI, HOMA-β, BW, BMI, neonatal complications at birth (LBW, hypoglycemia, RD, macrosomia, 1 and 5 min Apgar scores) | ↓ FBG *#, ↓ INS *#, ↓ HOMA-IR *#, ↑ QUICKI *#, ↓ HOMA-β *#, ↓ Neonatal complications at birth | [ | |
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| FRC dark (100 g/day in 2 half-bar doses, 1008 mg TP, 36.12 g C). Control: FFWC | RCT, co | 15 days (+ 7-day run-in and 7-day washout phase) | FBG, INS, 3-h-PBG, 3-h-PINS, HOMA-IR, β-cell function (CIR120), QUCIKI, ISI, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), SPB und DBP (clinical + 24-h ABMP), FMD, hsCRP, plasma homo-cysteine, electrolytes, uric acid, fibrinogen | ↓ HOMA-IR *#, ↑ QUICKI *#, ↑ ISI *#, ↑ ISI0 *#, ↑ β-cell function (CIR120) *# → affected 3-h-PBG and 3-h-PINS ↓ SBP *# + DBP *#, ↓ 24-h ABMP *#, ↑ FMD *#, ↓ TC *#, ↓ LDL *# | [ | |
| 27 g/day FRC (2 × 13.5 g, 850 mg flavan-3-ols (90 mg EC) and 100 mg IsoF | RCT, pd, pc | 1 year | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, HbA1c, QUICKI, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), 2-h ABPM, BW, 10-y total CHD risk | ↓ INS *#, ↓ HOMA-IR *#, ↑ QUICKI *#, ↓ TC:HDL ratio *#, ↓ LDL *#, ↑ HDL:LDL ratio *#, ↑ CHD risk * but ↓ CHD risk # | [ | |
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| 1500 mg decaffeinated GTE (3 × 500 mg/day, 856 mg EGCG) | RCT, pc, d-b | 16 weeks | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, HbA1c, leptin, ghrelin, adiponectin, lipids (TG, TC, LDL, HDL), SPB, DBP, creatinine, ALT, uric acid, BW, BMI, WC | ↓ HbA1c *, ↓ HOMA-IR *, ↓ INS *, ↑ ghrelin * (placebo too), ↓ WC * | [ | |
| 340 mL green tea + GTE/day (582.8 mg catechins/day) Control: 340 mL green tea + GTE/day (96.3 mg catechins/day) | CT, pd, d-b | 12 weeks (+ 4-week run-in, 4-week follow-up period) | FBG, INS, HbA1c, lipids (TG, TC, FFAs), total keton bodies, remnant-like lipoprotein C, adiponectin, enzymes, total protein, albumin, urea nitrogen, uric acid, creatinine, electrolytes, hematology analysis, SBP, DBP, BW, BMI, WC, HC, WHR, FM (%) | At wk 12: ↑ INS *#, ↑ adiponectin *, ↓ TC #, ↓ FFAs *, ↓ total ketone Bodies *, ↓ WC *#, ↓ WHR *# | [ | |
| GTE powder (one packet/day, 544 mg PP, 456 mg C) | RCT, co | 2 months/inter-vention | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, HbA1c, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), hsCRP, SPB, DBP, BW, BMI, FM | ↓ HbA1c * | [ | |
| GTE powder (one packet/day, 544 mg PP, 456 mg C) | RCT, pd | 2 months | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, HbA1c, hsCRP, SPB, DBP, BW, BMI | ↓ FBG, ↓ INS, ↓ HOMA-IR, ↓ HbA1c *, | [ | |
| 900 mL green tea (9 g) Control: water | CT, co | 4 weeks | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, adiponectin, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), hsCRP, IL-6, arterial stiffness | No effects | [ | |
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| 600 mg GSE/day (2 × 300 mg/day) | RCT, co, pc, d-b | 4 weeks/intervention (+2-week washout) | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, HbA1c (only at baseline), fructosamine, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), liver function, hsCRP, endothelial function, oxidative stress (TAOS, GSH, GSSG), ACR | ↓ TC *, ↓ hsCRP *, ↓ fructosamie *, ↑ GSH * | [ | |
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| Cacao capsules (2,5 g/day ACTICOATM cacao powder, 207.5 mg Fla) | RCT, pc, pd, d-b | 12 weeks | FBG, INS, HOMA-IR, HbA1c, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), SBP, DBD, creatinine, BW, BMI, WC, WHR, FM | ↓ WC * ↓ WHR * | [ | |
| Cacao beverages (2 × 28 g Cacao powder/day, 180, 400 or 900 mg Fla/day) Control: cacao beverages (30 mg Fla/day) | Explora-tory rando-mized | 5 days (10 days washout) | FBG, INS, TG, hsCRP, ICAM, IL-6, total 8-isoprostane, SBP, DBP, BW, BMI, WC, FM | ↓ 8-isoprostane *, ↓ hsCRP *, ↓ IL-6 * (as the dose of Fla increased) | [ | |
| Cacao beverage (960 mg PP, 480 mg Fla) with high-fat breakfast (766 kcal, 50 g fat) | RCT, pc, co, d-b (1 week washout phase) | Single dose (6-h study: 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 h) | Fasting + post-prandial: BG, INS, HOMA-IR, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), hsCRP, SBP, DBP, SAE, LAE; fasting: BW, BMI, WC | ↑ HDL# (1 h and 4 h, 6 h-AUC, overall ∆:1.5 ± 0.8 mg/dL), ↑ Ins# (4 h, overall ∆: 5.2 ± 3.2 mU/L), ↑ HOMA-IR# (4 h, 4 h-AUC, no overall), ↓ LAE# (2 h, overall ∆: −1.6 ± 0.7 mL/mm Hg) | [ | |
| 2.5 g cacao (5 capsules: 0.5 g ACTICOATM cacao powder, 40.4 mg EC) with diabetic-suitable breakfast. Control: cellulose | RCT, pc, co, d-b | Single dose (4-h study: 0, 2, 4h) (≥2 week wash-out) | Fasting & post-prandial: BG, INS, HOMA-IR, lipids (TC, LDL, HDL, TG), SBP, DBP, fasting: BW, WC, HC, WHR, FM | No effects | [ | |
* compared with the baseline values. # compared with the control group; 3 ABPM: ambulatory blood pressure monitoring; ACR: (urinary) albumin:creatinine ratio; ALT: alanine aminotransferase; AUC: area under the curve; BW: body weight; co: cross-over; CV: cardiovascular; BG: blood glucose; BMI: body mass index; CHD: coronary heart disease; CIR: corrected insulin response; CT: clinical trial; d: day; d-b: double-blind; DBP: diastolic blood pressure; FBG: fasting blood glucose; FFAs: free fatty acids; FFWC: flavanol-free white chocolate; Fla: flavanols; FM: fat mass; FMD: flow-mediated dilation; FRC: flavanol-rich chocolate; GDM: gestational diabetes mellitus; GSE: grape seed extract; GSH: reduced glutathione; GSSG: oxidized glutathione; GTE: green tea extract; HbA1c: glycated hemoglobin; HC: hip circumference; HDL: high density lipoprotein cholesterol; HOMA-IR: homeostasis model assessment for insulin resistance; hsCRP: high-sensitivity C-reactive protein; ICAM: intercellular adhesion molecule-1; IGT: impaired glucose tolerance; IL-6: interleukin-6; INS: insulin; IRes: insulin resistance; ISI: insulin sensitivity index; IsoF: isoflavones; LAE: large artery elasticity; LBW: low birth weight; LDL: low density lipoprotein cholesterol; m: men; mo: month, OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test; PBG: postprandial blood glucose; pc: placebo-controlled; pd: parallel group design; PINS: postprandial insulin concentration; PP: polyphenols; QUICKI: quantitative insulin sensitivity check index; RCT: randomized controlled trial; RD: respiratory distress; SAE: small artery elasticity; SBP: systolic blood pressure; TAOS: total antioxidant status; TC: total cholesterol; TG: triglycerides; TP: total phenols; T2D: type 2 diabetes; w: women; sig.: significant; WC: waist circumference; WHR: waist to hip ratio; wk: week; y: year. Flavan-3-ols and their microbial metabolites: EC: epicatechin; EGCG: epigallocatechin gallate.