| Literature DB >> 34959673 |
Geert René Verheyen1, Luc Pieters2, Sheila Maregesi3, Sabine Van Miert1.
Abstract
More than 450 million people worldwide are suffering from diabetes and this number is expected to increase. In developing countries, such as Tanzania, the number of patients suffering from diabetes and associated diseases is increasing as well. Up to 80% of the Tanzanian people rely on traditional medicines for their health care services. The nature of Tanzanian is very rich in different plant and insect species, and this could be exploited through their implementation in preventive and/or curative approaches in the battle against diabetes. The implementation of healthy insects in the diets of people may help in the prevention of obesity, which is a risk factor in the etiology of diabetes, while the identification of small molecules in insects may help in the discovery of potential new drugs that can be used in the treatment of diabetes. In this paper, an overview on the potential implementation of insects against diabetes is presented.Entities:
Keywords: diabetes; entomophagy; entomotherapy; insects; traditional medicine
Year: 2021 PMID: 34959673 PMCID: PMC8707174 DOI: 10.3390/ph14121273
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Nutritional composition (%) and energy content (Kcal/100 g) of different orders of edible insects (dry weight).
| Edible Insect | Protein (%) | Fat (%) | Fiber (%) | NFE (%) | Ash (%) | Energy Content (Kcal/100 g) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 57.30 | 29.90 | 5.31 | 4.53 | 2.94 | / | |
| 40.69 | 33.40 | 10.74 | 13.20 | 5.07 | 490.30 | |
| 49.48 | 22.75 | 13.56 | 6.01 | 10.31 | 409.78 | |
| 48.33 | 30.26 | 12.40 | 6.08 | 5.03 | 478.99 | |
| 46.47 | 25.09 | 5.71 | 20.25 | 3.51 | 484.45 | |
| 35.34 | 32.74 | 5.06 | 22.84 | 5.88 | / | |
| 45.38 | 27.66 | 6.60 | 18.76 | 4.51 | 508.89 | |
| 55.23 | 19.83 | 11.79 | 4.63 | 8.53 | 431.33 | |
| 61.32 | 13.41 | 9.55 | 12.98 | 3.85 | 426.25 |
NFE = nitrogen-free extract, i.e., carbohydrates (NFE = 100% − (protein + crude fat + ash + crude fiber + moisture). Numbers are derived from [24].
General overview of insect orders and their use in traditional medicine (Adapted from [36,38,40].
| Insect Order | General Examples | Selection of Diseases Treated |
|---|---|---|
|
| Bees, wasps, ants | Rheumatic pain, arthritis, headache, haemorrhoids, mumps, asthma, |
|
| Beetles | Kidney pain, rheumatism, ear and tooth aches, wound healing, hair growth |
|
| Cockroaches | Regulate menstruation, control urination, renal colics, asthma, |
|
| Walking stick | Asthma, upset stomach, muscle pain |
|
| Flies, mosquitoes | Eye cysts, baldness, wound healing, osteomyelitis |
|
| True bugs | Goiter, tuberculosis, cough, skin disease, liver, stomach, and kidney diseases |
|
| Butterflies, moths | Asthma, earache, hemorrhage after delivery, shortness of breath, |
|
| Grasshoppers, crickets, katydids | Kidney, ulcerating, and fever complaints, venereal diseases, urinary problems, mental issues, wound healing, liver disorders, anaemia, dental caries |
|
| Termites | Asthma, hoarseness and sinusitis, wounds, malnutrition, heart conditions, anaemia, anti-diarrhoea, tuberculosis, prevent miscarriages |
Insect-derived small molecules and their potential therapeutic use.
| Species | Molecule | Examples | Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phloroglucinol derivatives | Macrocarpal, grandinol | Antimicrobial action | |
| Tetraponerines | Several structures identified | Cytotoxicity against tumor cell lines | |
| Alkaloids | Solenopsin A | Antiangiogenic activity by selective inhibition of protein kinase B (AKT) cancer treatment | |
| Alkaloids | N-(2-hydroxyethyl)-benzamide | Antibacterial action | |
| Dopamine derivatives | Polyrhadopamines, trolline, etc. | Treatment for cardiovascular, neurological, oncological, and renal diseases; rheumatoid arthritis | |
| N-containing molecules | 5-(3-indolylmethyl)-nicotinamide, β-carboline-3-carboxamide, 3-hydroxypyridine, etc. | Rheumatoid arthritis therapy, kidney problems, anti-inflammatory action | |
| Polybiosides | Polybiosides α and β | Neuroactive effect/stimulation of neurons | |
| N-acetyldopamine dimers | Molossusamides A, B, C | Anti-inflammation | |
| Phenolics | Blapsols A-D; dopamine dimers | Treatment of pathogenic inflammation by inhibiting COX enzymes | |
| Lipids | Dorsamin-A763, A737, A765, A739, A767 | Antioxidant effects | |
| Terpene-related compounds | Cantharidin, norcantharidin, | Derivatives with less toxicity are used in tumor therapy; | |
| Isocoumarins | Periplatins A-D | Cytotoxic to cancer cells; improvement in patients with sepsis | |
| Phenolics/N-containing compounds | Plancyols A and B, plancypyrazine A, plancyamide B | Treatment of cancer | |
| N-acetyl-dopamine derivatives | Aspongamide A, | Chronic kidney disease; COX2 inhibition | |
| Sesquiterpenoids and other small molecules | Aspongnoids A-D, asponguanines A-D, aspongadenines A-B, aspongpyrazines A-B, aspongester A | Promotion of proliferation of neural stem cells | |
| Alkaloids | Pancratistatin, narciclasine, ungeremine | Anticancer agents | |
| Phenanthrene dicarboxylic acid | Papilistatin | Cytotoxicity against pancreatic cancer cells |
Overview on the medicinal use of insects and derived products for diabetes or associated complicating disorders.
| Insect | Substance | Disorder | Mechanism | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ants | / | Diabetes | Diagnostic value if ants feed on a person’s urine | van Huis, 2002 [ |
| Xamues ( | Whole insect | Diabetes | / | Nallely et al., 2014 [ |
| Beetles | Whole insect | Diabetes | / | Crespo et al., 2011 [ |
| All insects | Chitin/chitosan | CVD | Total and LDL cholesterol lowering effect | Gallagher, 2003 [ |
| Anopheles mosquitoes | Anopheline | Cardiac disease | Antithrombotics | Figueiredo et al., 2012 [ |
| Lesser mealworm | Bioactive peptides | Diabetes, obesitas | Inhibition of DPP-IV | Lacroix et al., 2019 [ |
| Cricket, locust, silkworm, bamboo worm, house fly, mealworm, weaver ant | Bioactive peptides | Diabetes, obesitas | Inhibition of α-glucosidase and α-lipase | Matheswaran et al., 2020 [ |
| Bees ( | Venom | Diabetes | Increase in insulin level | Mousavi et al., 2012 [ |
| Bees ( | Bee stings | Diabetes | Lowering blood glucose, triglyceride, and cholesterol levels | Prakash and Bhargava, 2014 [ |
| Bees | Mellitin | Diabetes | Stimulation of pancreatic beta cells to increase insulin secretion | Morgan et al., 1984 [ |
| Silkworm cocoon | Ethanol extract | Diabetic nephropathy | Reduction in oxidative stress and fibrosis | Wang et al., 2019 [ |
| Silkworm cocoon | Ethanol extract | Hypercholesterolemia and atherosclerosis | Lipid lowering capability and lowering extent of atherosclerotic lesions | Ali and Arumugam, 2011 [ |
| Ants ( | Cholesteryl ester transfer protein inhibitor | CHD | Raises HDL and lowers LDL | Dettner, 2011 [ |