| Literature DB >> 34421444 |
Amina M Dirir1, Marianne Daou1, Ahmed F Yousef1,2, Lina F Yousef1.
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus is a multifactorial global health disorder that is rising at an alarming rate. Cardiovascular diseases, kidney damage and neuropathy are the main cause of high mortality rates among individuals with diabetes. One effective therapeutic approach for controlling hyperglycemia associated with type-2 diabetes is to target alpha-amylase and alpha-glucosidase, enzymes that catalyzes starch hydrolysis in the intestine. At present, approved inhibitors for these enzymes are restricted to acarbose, miglitol and voglibose. Although these inhibitors retard glucose absorption, undesirable gastrointestinal side effects impede their application. Therefore, research efforts continue to seek novel inhibitors with improved efficacy and minimal side effects. Natural products of plant origin have been a valuable source of therapeutic agents with lesser toxicity and side effects. The anti-diabetic potential through alpha-glucosidase inhibition of plant-derived molecules are summarized in this review. Eight molecules (Taxumariene F, Akebonoic acid, Morusin, Rhaponticin, Procyanidin A2, Alaternin, Mulberrofuran K and Psoralidin) were selected as promising drug candidates and their pharmacokinetic properties and toxicity were discussed where available. Supplementary Information: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s11101-021-09773-1.Entities:
Keywords: Alpha-glucosidase; Diabetes; IC50; Stilbenes; Tannins; Triterpenoids
Year: 2021 PMID: 34421444 PMCID: PMC8364835 DOI: 10.1007/s11101-021-09773-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phytochem Rev ISSN: 1568-7767 Impact factor: 7.741
Fig. 1Acarbose, miglitol and voglibose structures
Crude plant extracts showing alpha-glucosidase inhibitory activity
| Plant name | Family | Part used | Type of extract | Enzyme source | IC50a extract (mg/mL) | IC50 control (mg/mL) | Bioavailability | Toxicity | Clinical studies | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Scrophulariaceae | Aerial parts | Ethanolic extract | ndb | 0.027 | Acarbose (0.088) | nd | nd | nd | Nguyen et al. ( | |
| Aqueous extract | 0.043 | |||||||||
| Annonaceae | Leaves | Ethanolic extract | Yeast | 0.097 | Acarbose (0.12129) | nd | The methanolic extract of | nd | Onwusonye et al. ( | |
| Sapotaceae | Stem bark | Aqueous extract | Yeast | 0.0012 | Acarbose (0.198) | nd | Different extracts obtained from the leaves of | nd | Shailajan and Gurjar ( | |
| Musaceae | Seeds | Methanolic extract | Yeast | 0.0018 | Acarbose (0.1215) | nd | The extract of | nd | Ganesan and Natesan ( | |
| Compositae | Flowers | Petroleum ether extract | Fungi | 0.242 | Acarbose (0.282) | nd | The oral administration of (2000 mg/kg b. w.) of the methanol extract of | nd | Bouriche et al. ( | |
| Ethyl acetate extract | 0.437 | |||||||||
| Butanol extract | 0.421 | |||||||||
| Flacourtiaceae | Barks | Ethanolic extract | nd | 0.019 | Acarbose (0.016) | nd | nd | nd | Sahoo et al. ( | |
| Hypericaceae | Aerial parts | Ethanolic extract | nd | 0.014 | Acarbose (0.068) | nd | nd | nd | Mandrone et al. ( | |
| Hypericaceae | Aerial parts | Ethanolic extract | nd | 0.00725 | nd | nd | nd | |||
| Hamamelidaceae | Leaves | Ethanolic extract | Yeast | 0.059 | Acarbose (0.0013) | nd | nd | nd | Zhang et al. ( | |
| Euphorbiaceae | Leaves | Methanolic extract | Yeast | 0.0084 | Quercetin (0.0042) | nd | nd | nd | Ndrianingsih et al. ( | |
| Podocarpaceae | 0.0452 | nd | nd | nd | ||||||
| Fagaceae | 0.042 | nd | nd | nd | ||||||
| 0.11 | nd | nd | nd | |||||||
| 0.0447 | nd | nd | nd | |||||||
| 0.0098 | nd | nd | nd | |||||||
| Salicaceae | 0.1823 | nd | nd | nd |
aIC50, the half maximal inhibitory concentration
bnd, not determined
Fig. 2A Bar chart showing the number of bioactive compounds from the different plant families. B Pie chart showing the chemical distribution of selected compounds
Fig. 3Chemical structures of promising alpha-glucosidase inhibitors of plant origin. (Taxumariene F, Akebonoic acid, Morusin, Rhaponticin, Procyanidin A2, Alaternin, Mulberrofuran K and Psoralidin)
Inhibitory activities of promising plant derived compounds towards alpha-glucosidase enzyme in comparison to positive controls
| Compound name | Class | Plant name | IC50 value (μM) | Mode of inhibition | IC50 value of the positive control (μM) | Bioavailability | Toxicity | Clinical studies | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rhaponticin | Stilbenes | 0.3 | ND | 50.04 (acarbose) | Rhaponticin is rapidly metabolized and distributed in rat tissues and its bioavailability was found to be very low (0.03%) | Rhaponticin showed no toxic effect when given up to 2000 mg/kg in adult male Wistar rats | ND | Zhao et al. ( | |
| Procyanidin A2 | Tannins | 0.47 | ND | 586.6 (acarbose) | After the administration of 250 mg/kg of peanut skin extract, rich in procyanidin A2, maximum concentration of this molecule was reached after 30 min. Procyanidin A2 showed rapid clearance from plasma within 1 h after the extract intake | ND | ND | Bansode et al. ( | |
| Mulberrofuran K | Chalcone derivatives | 1.25 | ND | 1428 (acarbose) | ND | ND | ND | Wang et al. ( | |
| Morusin | Flavones | 3.19 | ND | 85.29 (1-Deoxynojirimycin) | Morusin was rapidly absorbed and metabolized into mono-glucuronidated metabolites. The Cmax was found to be 299.12 ng/mL after oral administration of 16 mg/kg bw | The LD50 of morusin was found to be 20 mg/kg after intraperitoneal injection in mice | ND | Gupta et al. ( | |
| Alaternin | Anthraquinones | 3.45 | Mixed-type inhibition | 191.4 (acarbose) | ND | Alaternin did not show any cytotoxic effect on liver hepatocellular cells (HepG2) up to 50 µM | ND | Jung et al. ( | |
| Taxumariene F | Diterpenoids | 3.49 | ND | 155.86 (acarbose) | ND | ND | ND | Chen et al. ( | |
| Psoralidin | Coumestans | 3.5 | ND | 163.6 (acarbose) | The half-life (T1/2) was 7.2 h and 7.1 h, Cmax was 0.0095 mg/L and 0.0263 mg/L, and AUC was 0.0954 mg/L.h and 0.2 mg/L.h for 20 and 40 mg/mL dosages, respectively. Psoralidin characterized by a large volume of distribution. CYP2C19 enzyme was the main enzyme that involves in the metabolism of psoralidin | ND | A combination of an oral tablets that contain psoralidin as an active component and a topical cream Clarina was given to patients with grade II and III acne vulgaris for one month. Results indicated that 56.25% of grade II acne cases had an excellent response and 43.75% had a good response. However, only 38.30% of patients with grade III acne had an excellent response, 5% had a moderate response and 56.66% had a good response. There were no significant adverse effects in all the patients who received the medications | Gopal et al. ( | |
| Akebonoic acid | Triterpenoids | 9.0 | ND | 409 (acarbose) | ND | ND | ND | Jeong et al. ( |
Polypharmacological properties of promising alpha-glucosidase inhibitors
| Compound name | Bioactivity | Key findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rhaponticin | Anti-cancer activity | Inhibited the growth of stomach cancer cells through apoptosis induction, IC50 (0–200 μM) Inhibited the activity of FAS and down-regulated its expression in human breast cancer cells, IC50 (0–400 μM) | Hibasami et al. ( Li et al. ( |
| Anti-inflammatory activity | Exhibited LOX inhibitory activity (IC50 = 34.3 μM) | (Ngoc et al. | |
| Neuroprotective effect | Anti-Parkinson's disease activity: Inhibited the production of proinflammatory mediators such as NO, PGE2, TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, and ROS in LPS‐induced microglial cells (10, 25 and 50 μM). Rhaponticin improved motor impairments and prevented the damage of dopaminergic neurons in vivo Anti-Alzheimer's disease activity: Exhibited protective effect against Aβ peptide-induced apoptosis in human neuroblastoma cells, IC50 (0–30 μM). This effect is probably mediated through the up-regulation of bcl-2 and the down-regulation of Bax | Zhao et al. ( Misiti et al. ( | |
| Anti-diabetic activity | Reduced glucose levels, enhanced glucose tolerance and impeded hepatic fibrosis and steatosis in vivo (125 mg/kg) | Chen et al. ( | |
| Procyanidin A2 | Anti-inflammatory activity | Showed an inhibitory action against cytokine stimulated-CCL11 production in lung epithelial cells, IC50 (1–20 μM) | Coleman et al. ( |
| Neuroprotective effect | Prevented (10 μM) neuroinflammation by inhibiting pro-inflammatory mediators and suppressed apoptosis through the up-regulation of bcl-2 and the down-regulation of Bax in Aβ (1–42) induced BV-2 cells | Tang et al. ( | |
| Antiviral activity | Exhibited an inhibitory activity against SARS-CoV infection (IC50 = 29.9 μM) | Zhuang et al. ( | |
| Anti-oxidant activity1 | Prevented Exhibited a potent inhibitory activity against LDL oxidation (IC50 = 2.1 μM) | Xu et al. ( Park et al. ( | |
| Mulberrofuran K | Anti-diabetic activity | Exhibited potent PTP1B inhibitory activity (IC50 = 8.49 μM) | Ha et al. ( |
| Anti-inflammatory activity | Inhibited the generation of proinflammatory mediators including NO, TNF-α, IL-1β, IL-6, and ROS. Inhibited the expression of iNOS and COX-2 and the transcriptional activation of NF-κB and ERK 1/2, IC50 (0–10 μM) | Shim et al. ( | |
| Neuroprotective effect | Inhibited NO production (IC50 = 7.1 μM) and tau protein aggregation (20 μM). Exhibited neuroprotective effect through the up-regulation of GSH level and the inhibition of ROS generation in glutamate-stimulated HT22 cells (0.5, 1, and 2 μM) | Xia et al. ( | |
| Morusin | Anti-cancer activity | Colorectal cancer: Induced apoptosis and inhibited NF-kB activity Prostate cancer: Induced apoptosis through the inhibition of STAT3 signaling Liver cancer: Suppressed tumor growth in mice via the up-regulation of caspase-3 and the down-regulation of NF-kB gene expression Gastric cancer: Inhibited tumor growth through the down-regulation of myelocytomatosis (c-Myc) expression | Lee et al. ( Lim et al. ( Wan et al. ( Wang et al. ( |
| Neuroprotective activity | Showed inhibitory activity against AChE and BChE with IC50 value of 36.4 and 24.08 μM, respectively | Kim et al. ( | |
| Anti-inflammatory activity | Exhibited protective effect against TNBS-stimulated colitis in rats | Vochyánova et al. ( | |
| Alaternin | Anti-diabetic activity | Exhibited potent PTP1B inhibitory activity (IC50 = 1.22 μM) | Jung et al. ( |
| Anti-oxidant actvity | Exhibited potent peroxynitrite scavenging activity with IC50 value of 2.70 μM | Park et al. ( | |
| Hepatoprotective activity | Exhibited hepatoprotective effects on tacrine-mediated cytotoxicity in liver cells with EC50 value of 4.02 μM on tacrine -induced cytotoxicity | Jung et al. ( | |
| Neuroprotective activity | Exhibited mixed-type inhibitory activity against both hMAO enzyme isozymes, hMAO-A (IC50 = 5.35 μM), and hMAO-B (IC50 = 4.55 μM) Showed inhibitory activity against AChE, BChE and BACE1 with IC50 value of 21.9, 394.77 and 3.28 μM, respectively Alaternin (10 mg/kg) inhibited nitrotyrosine and lipid peroxidation. Suppressed the expression of iNOS and decreased microglial activation in vivo | Paudel et al. ( Jung et al. ( Shin et al. ( | |
| Antityrosinase activity | Inhibited tyrosinase enzyme activity with IC50 value of 327.3 μM after 30 min of incubation | Lu and Ko ( | |
| Psoralidin | Estrogenic activity | Psoralidin was found to be a potent ERα and ERβ agonist | Liu et al. ( |
| Anti-cancer activity | Breast cancer: Induced DNA damage and autophagy through NOX4-mediated ROS production, IC50 (0–10 μM) Colon cancer: Apoptosis induction through the suppression of Bcl-2/Bax and NF-κB signaling pathways, IC50 (0–20 μM) Liver cancer: Apoptosis induction via intrinsic and extrinsic pathways, IC50 (0–64 μM) | Ren et al. ( Jin et al. ( Bin et al. ( | |
| Anti-inflammatory activity | Exhibited an inhibitory activity against LPS-stimulated NO production, (IC50 = 27.46 μM) | Chen et al. ( | |
| Akebonoic acid | Cytotoxic activities | Cytotoxic effects against A549, HeLa, HepG2 cancer cell lines with IC50 values 49.48, 28.63 and 52.89 μM, respectively | Wang et al. ( |