| Literature DB >> 33917044 |
Aránzazu Bocanegra1, Adrián Macho-González2,3, Alba Garcimartín1,3, Juana Benedí1,3, Francisco José Sánchez-Muniz2,3.
Abstract
Type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is a major systemic disease which involves impaired pancreatic function and currently affects half a billion people worldwide. Diet is considered the cornerstone to reduce incidence and prevalence of this disease. Algae contains fiber, polyphenols, ω-3 PUFAs, and bioactive molecules with potential antidiabetic activity. This review delves into the applications of algae and their components in T2DM, as well as to ascertain the mechanism involved (e.g., glucose absorption, lipids metabolism, antioxidant properties, etc.). PubMed, and Google Scholar databases were used. Papers in which whole alga, algal extracts, or their isolated compounds were studied in in vitro conditions, T2DM experimental models, and humans were selected and discussed. This review also focuses on meat matrices or protein concentrate-based products in which different types of alga were included, aimed to modulate carbohydrate digestion and absorption, blood glucose, gastrointestinal neurohormones secretion, glycosylation products, and insulin resistance. As microbiota dysbiosis in T2DM and metabolic alterations in different organs are related, the review also delves on the effects of several bioactive algal compounds on the colon/microbiota-liver-pancreas-brain axis. As the responses to therapeutic diets vary dramatically among individuals due to genetic components, it seems a priority to identify major gene polymorphisms affecting potential positive effects of algal compounds on T2DM treatment.Entities:
Keywords: algae; diabetes; functional food; functional meat; metabolism; microbiota
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33917044 PMCID: PMC8067684 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22083816
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Representative scheme of the Type-2 diabetes mellitus pathophysiology. Main organs affected in T2DM and their interrelation in insulin resistance development. FFA, free fatty acids; GLUT-2, type 2 glucose transporter; GLUT-4, type 4 glucose transporter; IL-1β, interleukin 1 β; IL-6, interleukin 6; IR, insulin resistance; sdLDL, small dense low density lipoproteins; SCFAs, short-chain fatty acids; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor α; VLDL, very low density lipoproteins.
Figure 2Major environmental and genetics factors related to type-2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The Venn diagram summarizes loci significantly associated with T2DM according to the main organ affected (p < 5 × 10−8). The genetic variants represented are widely influenced by environmental factors, where diet and physical exercise are the main ones.
Main characteristics of macroalgal division *.
| Division/Common Name | Specie | Pigments | Storage Product | Cell Structural Wall | Intercellular Mucilage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phaeophyta/Brown algae |
| Chlorophyll a, c Fucoxanthins | Laminarans | Cellulose, | Alginic acid/Alginates, |
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
| Chlorophyta/Green algae | Chlorophyll a, b | Starch | Cellulose, Xylans, Mannans | Sulfated polysaccharides | |
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
| Rhodophyta/Red algae | Phycoerythrin | Florideans | Cellulose, | Sulfated polysaccharides (Agar, Carrageenans, Porphyrans) | |
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
|
| |||||
|
|
* Adapted with permission from ref. [10]. Copyright 2021 Copyright MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC.
Figure 3Effects of algae consumption on type 2 Diabetes Mellitus pathophysiology. Schematic representation of how algae consumption is able to modulate the different organs affected in T2DM. FFA, free fatty acids; GLUT-2, type-2 glucose transporter; GLUT-4, type 4 glucose transporter; IL-1β, interleukin 1 β; IL-6, interleukin 6; IR, insulin resistance; sdLDL, small dense low density lipoproteins; SCFAs, short-chain fatty acids; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor α; VLDL, very low density lipoproteins.
Study assay, study characteristic, source, and content and bioactivity.
| Study Assay | Study Characteristics | Source and Content | Bioactivity | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention trial | Diet with large amount of seaweed | Total vegetable intake | ↓ HbA1c, Tg, waist circumference | [ |
| >150 g of daily total vegetable | ↓ HbA1c | |||
| >200 g of total vegetable intake | ↓ Serum Tg | |||
| Green vegetable intake | ↓ Body mass index, Tg, waist circumference | |||
| Double blind, randomized, placebo-controlled crossover study | 23 participants | Blend of | ↓ Insulin concentrations | [ |
| Randomized Crossover Trial | 26 participants | ↓Postprandial glycemia | [ | |
| Randomized crossover study | 12 participants | 70 g Mekabu( | ↓ Postprandial glycemia | [ |
| Randomized controlled trial | 12 overweight, healthy males. Aged 40 year | ↓ Energy intake | [ | |
| In vitro assay | Brown marine algae from Eastern Canada. | Fucoidan extracted from | Inhibit α-glucosidade and α-amylase activities | [ |
| Mouse model and human hepatic cells | Male C57BL/6J mice | Food additive carrageenan (E-407) | ↓ Glucose tolerance | [ |
| In vivo assay | Male Wistar rats | Lota-Carrageenans from | ↓ Body weight | [ |
| Randomized controlled trial | 10 healthy male volunteers, studied on three occasions | Agar (2.0 g) | ↓ Delay gastric emptying | [ |
| Randomized controlled trial | 76 obese patients with type 2 diabetes | Agar (180 g) + Traditional Japanese food | ↓ HbA1c, | [ |
| In vitro and in vivo assay | Normal C57/BL6 mice | Laminarin (50 mg/mL) | ↑ GLP-1 secretion and c-Fos protein expression in STC-1 cells | [ |
| In vivo assay | Adult male Wistar rats | Sodium alginate | Natural and 50 and 100 kDa molecular weights of alginates: | [ |
| In vitro and vivo assay | Wistar rats | Calcium alginate | Inhibited α-glucosidase activity in vitro Suppression postprandial increase of blood glucose | [ |
| Randomized controlled trial | 48 overweight or obese participants | Sodium alginate from | No effect on gastric motor functions, satiation, appetite, or gut hormones | [ |
| Randomized placebo-controlled trial | 176 participants | Fiber supplements of alginate + balanced 1200 Kcal diet | ↓ Body weight | [ |
| In vitro and in vivo assay | IEC-6 cell line | Fucoidans from eleven species of brown algae | Specially from | [ |
| In vitro assay | Human colonic carcinoma Caco-2 cells | Five brown species of alga | Cold water and ethanol extracts of | [ |
| In vitro assay | 3T3-L1 cells | Fucoidan from | ↑ Glucose uptake | [ |
| In vivo assay | Diabetic KK-A(y) mice | Polyphenols from | ↓ α-glucosidase and α-amylase activity | [ |
| In vivo assay | Male diabetic KK-A(y) mice | Polyphenols (Phlorotannins) from | ↓ Increase in plasma glucose | [ |
| In vivo assay | Male Wistar rats | ↓ α-glucosidase and α-amylase activity | [ | |
| Double-blind, placebo-controlled, randomised croos-overal trial | 38 healthy adults (Asian and non-Asian) | Polyphenol-rich | ↑ Risk of insulin resistance among Asian populations | [ |
| In vivo | Rat model of type 2 diabetes | ↓ Blood glucose | [ | |
| In vivo | Obese murine model | Fucoxanthin-rich | ↓ Alterations in lipid metabolism and IR induced by a HF diet | [ |
| In vitro assay | Insulin-resistant HepG2 cells | Fucosterol from | ↑ Glucose uptake | [ |
| In vivo assay | Growing Zucker fa-fa rats | Modified AIM-93 diets containing 30% of freeze-dried skid surimi formulated with glucomannan (30%) or with glucomannan plus Spirulina (30%) without added cholesterol | ↓ Hyperglycemia (glucomannan + Spirulina), | [ |
HbA1C, glycosylated haemoglobin; Tg, triglycerides; GLP-1, serum glucagon-like peptide-1; PPARϒ, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor ϒ. Arrows ↑ or ↓ indicates significantly more or less than control, respectively.