| Literature DB >> 34970150 |
Tina Nie1, Garth J S Cooper1,2,3.
Abstract
Polyphenolic compounds are thought to show considerable promise for the treatment of various metabolic disorders, including type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). This review addresses evidence from in vitro, in vivo, and clinical studies for the antidiabetic effects of certain polyphenolic compounds. We focus on the role of cytotoxic human amylin (hA) aggregates in the pathogenesis of T2DM, and how polyphenols can ameliorate this process by suppressing or modifying their formation. Small, soluble amylin oligomers elicit cytotoxicity in pancreatic islet β-cells and may thus cause β-cell disruption in T2DM. Amylin oligomers may also contribute to oxidative stress and inflammation that lead to the triggering of β-cell apoptosis. Polyphenols may exert antidiabetic effects via their ability to inhibit hA aggregation, and to modulate oxidative stress, inflammation, and other pathways that are β-cell-protective or insulin-sensitizing. There is evidence that their ability to inhibit and destabilize self-assembly by hA requires aromatic molecular structures that bind to misfolding monomers or oligomers, coupled with adjacent hydroxyl groups present on single phenyl rings. Thus, these multifunctional compounds have the potential to be effective against the pleiotropic mechanisms of T2DM. However, substantial further research will be required before it can be determined whether a polyphenol-based molecular entity can be used as a therapeutic for type 2 diabetes.Entities:
Keywords: IAPP; amylin; flavonoids; insulin; islet β-cells; natural products; polyphenol; type 2 diabetes
Year: 2021 PMID: 34970150 PMCID: PMC8712966 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2021.798329
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Mechanisms of human amylin (hA)-evoked β-cell death. Abbreviations: AIF, apoptosis-inducing factor; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; JNK, c-Jun N-terminal kinase; NOX-1, NADPH oxidase-1; RAGE, receptor for advanced glycation end-products; ROS, reactive oxygen species; TRPV4, transient receptor potential cation channel subfamily V member 4
Summary table of in vitro studies of polyphenolic compounds shown to inhibit human amylin (hA) fibril formation in biophysical studies.
| Compound | Inhibits hA aggregation? (compound:hA molar ratio) | Ability to disaggregate fibrils? (compound:hA molar ratio) | Prevents hA-induced cytotoxicity? (compound:hA molar ratio) | Cell line used for cytotoxicity assay | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Resveratrol | Yes (0.05:1–10:1) | Not studied | Yes (1:1) | INS-1E |
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| Yes (1:1 in INSE-1E cell culture) | Not studied | Yes (1:1) | INS-1E |
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| Yes (1:1–20:1) | No (10:1) | Not studied | - |
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| Epigallocatechin gallate | Yes (0.2:1–1:1) | Yes (1:1) | Yes (1:1) | INS-1 |
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| Yes (0.5:1–1:1) | Yes (1:2–5:1) | Not studied | - |
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| Yes (0.2:1–5:1) | Not studied | Not studied | - |
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| Yes (20:1) | Not studied | Not studied | - |
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| Yes (2:1–20:1) | Yes (1:1–3:1) | Not studied | - |
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| Rutin | Yes (0.1:1–10:1) | Yes (6:1–11:1) | Not studied | - |
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| Yes (20:1) | Not studied | Not studied | - |
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| Quercetin | Yes (2:1) | Not studied | Yes (small effect at 1:7.5, cytotoxic alone at high concentrations (IC50 = 110 µM)) | RIN-m5F |
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| Yes (10:1) | Not studied | Not studied | - |
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| Curcumin | Yes (0.01:1–1:1) | No (1:1) | Yes in INS 832/13 (0.67:1–1.67:1, cytotoxic alone at concentrations ≥25 µM). | INS 832/13, hA-transduced INS 832/13, HIP rat isolated pancreatic islets |
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| No in INS 832/13 cells overexpressing hA and in isolated islets from HIP rats | |||||
| Baicalein | Yes (3:1–10:1) | Yes (3:1) | Yes (0.5:1–5:1) | INS-1 |
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| Oleuropein | Yes (1:1–9:1) | Not studied | Yes (3:1–9:1) | RIN-m5F |
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| Yes (1:1–20:1) | Yes (10:1) | Yes (1:1–10:1) | INS-1 |
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| Yes (0.67:1) | Not studied | Yes (2:1–20:1) | INS-1E |
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| Caffeic acid | Yes (0.4–4:1) | Not studied | Not studied | - |
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| Yes (1:1) | Yes (1:1) | Yes (5:1) | Neuro2A |
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| Rosmarinic acid | Yes (0.04:1–4:1) | Not studied | Not studied | - |
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| Yes (0.3:1–30:1) | Yes (1:1–3:1) | Yes (5:1) | INS-1, Neuro2A |
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| Morin | Yes (1:1–10:1) | Yes (1:1–5:1) | Not studied | - |
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Summary table of in vivo studies of polyphenolic compounds in animal models of diabetes. Abbreviations: AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; CPT-1, carnitine palmitoyl transferase 1; eNOS, endothelial nitric oxide synthase; ER, endoplasmic reticulum; FFA, free fatty acids; GLUT-4, glucose transporter 4; hA, human amylin; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; HOMA-IR, Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance; NA, nicotinamide; NFκB, nuclear factor κ B; PECK, phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase; PGC-1α, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1α; PI3K, phosphoinositide 3-kinase; ROS, reactive oxygen species; SIRT1, sirtuin 1; SOD, superoxide dismutase; STZ, streptozotocin.
| Compound | Animal model | Dose and route of administration | Duration | Findings | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Epigallocatechin gallate | hA-transgenic mice | 0.4 mg/ml in drinking water | 3 weeks | Decreased pancreatic amyloid in hemizygous mice but not in homozygous. Nonsignificant tendency to increase islet number in homozygous mice. No change in blood glucose, body weight or pancreatic insulin staining |
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| Rutin | hA-transgenic mice | 0.5 mg/ml in drinking water | From weaning until death | Delayed diabetes onset, prolonged time to accelerated increases in blood glucose, fluid intake and body-weight loss |
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| Rosmarinic acid | HIP rats | 0.5% w/w dietary supplementation | 4 months | Reduced pancreatic amyloid deposition, hA oligomer levels in sera, and non-fasting blood glucose. Prevented hypoinsulinemia |
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| Resveratrol |
| 0.005 and 0.02% w/w dietary supplementation | 6 weeks | Both doses decreased blood glucose levels. Higher dose decreased HbA1c levels and increased glucose tolerance, plasma insulin levels and pancreatic insulin staining. |
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| Higher dose increased hepatic glycolytic enzyme activity and decreased gluconeogenesis enzyme activity. Both doses increased skeletal muscle GLUT-4 protein. Both doses decreased plasma and hepatic lipid levels | |||||
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| 20 mg/kg/day orally | 12 weeks | No decrease in blood glucose levels but improved glucose tolerance and preserved islet β-cell mass. Decreased pancreatic ROS levels |
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| NA-STZ and STZ-induced diabetic rats | 0.05, 0.1, 0.5, 3.0, 6.0 and 10.0 mg/kg orally | Single dose or 3 mg/kg 3x daily for 7 days | Dose-dependently lowered plasma glucose (PI3K-dependent). Three and 10 mg/kg increased plasma insulin levels in NA-STZ rats but not STZ rats. Improved glucose tolerance in normal rats |
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| In STZ rats, 3 mg/kg increased Akt phosphorylation in skeletal muscle (PI3K-dependent), while 7-day treatment increased GLUT-4 protein in skeletal muscle and decreased PEPCK protein in liver | |||||
| NA-STZ and STZ-induced diabetic rats | 5 mg/kg/day orally | 30 days | Lowered fasting blood glucose and HbA1c levels, increased plasma insulin levels. Prevented β-cell degeneration. |
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| Normalized plasma levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines and antioxidants. Normalized pancreatic antioxidant enzyme activity. Decreased markers of oxidative stress in plasma and pancreas | |||||
| STZ-induced diabetic rats | 2.5 mg/kg/day orally | 2 weeks | Lowered blood glucose levels. May increase glucose uptake in the heart via increased Akt, AMPK and eNOS phosphorylation, and GLUT-4 translocation |
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| Green tea extract | High-fructose diet-fed rats | 0.5 g/100 ml drinking water | 12 weeks | Prevented increased in fasting plasma glucose and insulin. Normalized glucose and insulin response. Lowered blood pressure. |
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| Normalized insulin-stimulated glucose uptake and GLUT-4 protein levels in adipocytes | |||||
| Sprague Dawley rats | 0.5 g/100 ml drinking water | 12 weeks | No change in fasting plasma glucose after 4 and 6 weeks. After 12 weeks, reduced fasting plasma glucose and insulin levels and increased insulin sensitivity. Decreased plasma lipid levels. Increased glucose uptake in adipocytes |
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| STZ mice and | 30, 150 or 300 mg/kg orally | Single dose | 300 mg/kg lowered fasting blood glucose levels without altering insulin levels |
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| Epigallocatechin gallate | STZ mice | 100 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally | 5 days with STZ then 5 days alone | Reduced hyperglycemia and partially preserved islet mass. Attenuated the induction of iNOS expression |
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| STZ rats | 25 mg/kg/day orally | 8 weeks | Decreased serum glucose and lipid levels. Decreased hepatic lipid peroxidation and attenuated the decrease in SOD activity |
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| Sprague Dawley rats and Zucker rats | 70–92 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally | 7 days | Decreased serum glucose, insulin, leptin and lipid levels |
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| 1% w/w dietary supplementation | 10 weeks | Decreased fasting blood glucose. No change in fasting plasma insulin. Improved glucose tolerance but no improvement in insulin sensitivity. |
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| Decreased islet pathology. Reduced expression of ER stress markers in islets | |||||
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| 0.25, 0.5, or 1% w/w dietary supplementation | 7 weeks | Improved glucose tolerance. Dose-dependent reduction in blood glucose and increase in plasma insulin. Decreased plasma triacylglycerol. |
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| Increased glucokinase expression, decreased PEPCK expression in liver. Increased acyl-CoA oxidase-1 and CPT-1 in liver and adipose | |||||
| ZDF rats | 0.5% w/w dietary supplementation | 10 weeks | Improved glucose tolerance, decreased plasma FFA. |
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| Non-obese diabetic (NOD) mice | 0.05% w/v in drinking water | 27 weeks | Lowered fasting blood glucose and HbA1c levels, improved glucose tolerance, and increased plasma insulin levels. Delayed onset of diabetes and reduced mortality rate of diabetic mice. |
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| No effect on immune cell infiltrate in the pancreas. Increased plasma IL-10 and IL-12 levels but no effect on other measured cytokines | |||||
| High fat diet-fed mice | 50 mg/kg/day orally | 4 weeks | No effect on fasting serum glucose, insulin or lipid levels but improved glucose tolerance |
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| Epicatechin | Alloxan-induced diabetic rats | 30 mg/kg 2 x daily intraperitoneally | 2 days prior to alloxan and 1 day after, or 4–5 days after | Prevented hyperglycemia, hypoinsulinemia, and preserved β-cell mass |
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| Alloxan-induced diabetic rats | 100 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally | 2 weeks | Treatment group tended towards lower blood glucose levels but not significant |
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| STZ rats and BB/E rats | 30 mg/kg 2 x daily intraperitoneally | 6–9 days | No differences in blood glucose or β-cell mass in STZ rats. |
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| Or 90 mg/kg/day orally | In diabetic BB/E rats, failed to prevent body weight loss or decrease plasma glucose. In prediabetic BB/E rats, failed to prevent diabetes onset and progression | ||||
| Rutin | STZ rats | 25, 50 or 100 mg/kg/day orally | 45 days | All doses decreased fasting plasma glucose levels. 100 mg/kg increased plasma insulin and C-peptide, and decreased HbA1c levels. Decreased plasma oxidative stress markers and increased antioxidant levels |
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| STZ rats | 2, 25 or 50 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally | 2 weeks | All doses decreased plasma glucose levels. Improved nerve function, decreased oxidative stress and inflammation in nerves, and normalized antioxidant enzyme activity |
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| Fructose-fed rats | 50 or 100 mg/kg/day orally | 4 weeks | Decreased serum lipid levels. Higher dose improved renal function. Both doses decreased kidney and serum inflammation markers. |
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| Reversed hyperleptinemia and restored leptin and insulin signaling in kidney | |||||
| Quercetin | Fructose-fed rats | 50 or 100 mg/kg/day orally | 4 weeks | Decreased serum lipid levels. Improved renal function and decreased inflammation in kidney and serum. Reversed hyperleptinemia and restored leptin and insulin signaling in kidney |
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| High cholesterol diet-fed rats | 0.5% w/w dietary supplementation | 4 weeks | Prevented an increase in plasma glucose, insulin and lipid levels, and pancreatic cholesterol content. Increased pancreatic insulin content. |
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| Prevented decreases in pancreatic ATP levels and antioxidant enzyme activity. Prevented increases in oxidative stress and inflammation. Increased expression of SIRT1 and PGC-1α | |||||
| STZ rats | 10 or 15 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally | 10 days | Lowered plasma glucose and lipid levels, and improved glucose tolerance. Increased the number of pancreatic islets and increased hepatic hexokinase activity |
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| STZ rats | 15 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally | 4 weeks | Normalized serum glucose and insulin levels. Decreased pancreatic and serum oxidative stress markers and increased pancreatic antioxidant enzyme activity. Protected β-cells from degeneration |
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| STZ rats | 50 mg/kg/day orally with or without 70 mg/kg/day sitagliptin | 3 weeks | Decreased serum glucose and lipid levels, increased C-peptide levels. Reduced β-cell degeneration and increased insulin content. Decreased serum markers of oxidative stress and inflammation |
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| Alloxan-induced diabetic mice | 20 mg/kg/day orally | 3 weeks | Lowered fasting blood glucose. Increased glycolytic enzyme activity and decreased gluconeogenic enzyme activity in liver, skeletal muscle and kidney. Increased GLUT-4 expression in skeletal muscle, adipocytes and serum. |
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| Increased antioxidant enzyme activity in pancreas, liver, kidney and skeletal muscle. Decreased markers of lipid peroxidation and liver and kidney dysfunction. Reduced DNA damage in pancreas, liver and kidney | |||||
| Curcumin | STZ rats fed a high-fat diet | 50, 150 or 250 mg/kg/day orally | 7 weeks | Decreased fasting blood glucose and plasma lipid levels. Increased insulin levels and insulin sensitivity. Increased phosphorylated AMPK in skeletal muscle |
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| Alloxan-induced diabetic rats | 80 mg/kg/day orally | 3 weeks | Lowered blood glucose and Hb1Ac levels. Reduced lipid peroxidation and increased antioxidant enzyme activity in plasma and liver |
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| 0.2 g/kg dietary supplementation | 6 weeks | Decreased fasting blood glucose, Hb1Ac and plasma lipid levels, and increased insulin levels. Improved glucose tolerance and HOMA-IR. |
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| Increased hepatic glucokinase activity and decreased gluconeogenic enzyme activity. Increased hepatic glycogen storage and lowered lipid peroxidation. Normalized hepatic lipid regulating and antioxidant enzyme activity. Increased lipoprotein lipase activity in skeletal muscle but not adipose | |||||
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| 0.75% w/w dietary supplementation | 8 weeks | No effect on blood glucose levels. Attenuated NFκB expression in liver. Increased hepatic AMPK expression but no effect on SIRT1 or PGC-1α. No effect on protein nitration |
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| High fat diet-fed mice | 50 mg/kg/day orally | 15 days | Decreased blood glucose and serum insulin levels. Improved HOMA-IR and glucose tolerance. Decreased lipid peroxidation levels in serum and skeletal muscle but not in adipose or liver. Reduced ROS in skeletal muscle |
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| Kaempferol | STZ rats fed a high-fat diet | 50 or 150 mg/kg/day orally | 10 weeks | High dose reduced fasting blood glucose. Both doses decreased serum insulin, lipid levels, and markers of hepatic dysfunction. Improved insulin resistance and decreased markers of inflammation in the liver and serum |
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| STZ mice | 50 mg/kg/day orally | 12 weeks | Reduced fasting and non-fasting blood glucose levels, and incidence of overt diabetes. Improved glucose tolerance and plasma lipid profile. No effect on insulin levels. |
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| Decreased hepatic glucose production, pyruvate carboxylase activity but increased glucokinase activity and glycogen storage. Increased glucose metabolism in skeletal muscle | |||||
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| Alloxan-induced diabetic rats | 250 or 500 mg/kg intraperitoneally | 8 weeks | Dose-dependent decrease in fasting blood glucose. Decreased serum insulin, leptin, amylin and peptide YY levels. Reduced β-cell degeneration. |
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| Normalized hepatic glycolytic and gluconeogenic enzyme activity, and glycogen content. Increased hepatic and pancreatic antioxidant enzyme activity and decreased oxidative stress. Increased expression of components of the insulin signaling pathway | |||||
Summary table of studies of the antidiabetic effects of polyphenolic compounds in humans. Abbreviations: AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; BMI, body mass index; GIP, gastric inhibitory polypeptide; GLP-1, glucagon-like peptide 1; GSK-3β, glycogen synthase kinase-3β; HbA1c, hemoglobin A1c; HOMA-β, Homeostatic Model Assessment of β-cell Function; HOMA-IR, Homeostatic Model Assessment of Insulin Resistance; PGC-1α, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma coactivator 1α; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SIRT1, sirtuin 1; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus.
| Compound | Type of study | Dose per day (oral) | Duration | Participant criteria | Outcomes | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Polyphenols (general) | Meta-analysis | 33–2093 mg | 4 weeks–1 year | Diagnosed T2DM (taking or not taking medication), at high risk of T2DM, or low risk of T2DM | Reduced fasting blood glucose levels and small decrease in HbA1c levels. No effect on insulin levels or HOMA-IR. |
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| Effect was strongest in patients with diagnosed T2DM, especially in conjunction with antidiabetic medication | ||||||
| Green tea catechins | Meta-analysis | 208–1,207 mg | 2 weeks–6 months | Diagnosed or borderline T2DM, overweight to obese subjects, or healthy subjects | Decreased fasting blood glucose and HbA1c levels. No effect on fasting insulin levels or HOMA-IR. |
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| Effect only seen in studies with catechin intake ≥457 mg (median), and only in subjects with/at risk of metabolic syndrome. No difference between short or long duration studies | ||||||
| Meta-analysis | 235.64–1,206.9 mg | 3–24 weeks | Elevated fasting blood glucose, overweight to obese subjects, or healthy subjects | Lowered fasting blood glucose. No change in HbA1c, insulin levels or HOMA-IR. |
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| Effect only seen in studies with a duration ≥12 weeks. Dose and health status were not effect modifiers | ||||||
| Meta-analysis | 200 mg polyphenols – 4 cups green tea | 4 weeks–18 months | Participants with T2DM or prediabetes | No effect on fasting blood glucose, insulin, HbA1c or HOMA-IR. |
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| Epigallocatechin gallate | RCT | 300 mg | 8 weeks | Diagnosed T2DM and not receiving insulin treatment ( | Decreased fasting blood glucose and marker of inflammation. No effect on insulin levels or HOMA-IR. |
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| RCT | 800 mg | 8 weeks | Overweight or obese subjects ( | No change in fasting glucose, HbA1c, insulin, lipid levels, glucose tolerance, HOMA-IR or HOMA-β. There was a decrease in diastolic blood pressure |
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| Resveratrol | RCT | 10 mg | 4 weeks | Diagnosed T2DM and not receiving insulin treatment ( | Extended time to maximal tissue glucose levels after a meal and decreased HOMA-IR. Did not affect blood glucose, serum insulin, amylin, GLP-1, GIP or lipid levels, or HOMA-β. Decreased marker of oxidative stress and increased marker of insulin signaling |
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| RCT crossover | 150 mg | 30 days | Participants with obesity ( | Decreased plasma glucose, insulin, leptin, triglycerides levels, and HOMA-IR. Delayed peak glucose and insulin responses after a meal. Decreased systolic blood pressure. Decreased inflammatory markers. Increased markers of mitochondrial oxidative metabolism (including AMPK, SIRT1 and PGC-1α) and improved liver function |
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| RCT | 40 or 500 mg | 6 months | Diagnosed T2DM and not receiving insulin treatment ( | No change in fasting serum glucose, HbA1c, insulin or lipid levels, liver function biomarkers, HOMA-IR or blood pressure. Decrease in C-reactive protein (inflammation) |
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| RCT crossover | 1,000 mg | 5 weeks | Diagnosed T2DM managed by diet only ( | No change in fasting or post-prandial blood glucose or GLP-1 levels. No effect on HbA1c levels |
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| RCT | 1,500 mg | 4 weeks | Participants with obesity ( | No effect on fasting plasma glucose, HbA1c, insulin, lipid levels, HOMA-IR or blood pressure. No effect on insulin sensitivity by hyperinsulinemic euglycemic clamp. No effect on inflammatory or liver biomarkers, or AMPK and SIRT1 activity |
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| RCT | 3,000 mg | 12 weeks | Diagnosed T2DM, on oral hypoglycemic treatment ( | No change in fasting plasma glucose, insulin or lipid levels, or in HOMA-IR. Nonsignificant decrease in HbA1c. Did increased skeletal muscle SIRT1 expression, pAMPK:AMPK ratio, and resting metabolic rate |
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| Grape extract/Grape extract + resveratrol | RCT | 302 mg polyphenols ±16.2 mg resveratrol | 12 months | Participants with T2DM, stable coronary heart disease and hypertension taking medication ( | No effect on serum glucose, HbA1c, lipid levels, or blood pressure. Several inflammation markers were decreased |
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| Curcumin | RCT | 180 mg | 12 weeks | At risk of developing T2DM and BMI ≥25 ( | No change in fasting blood glucose but lowered serum insulin levels and HOMA-IR. Decreased serum amylin and GSK-3β levels |
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| RCT | 300 mg (curcuminoids) | 3 months | Diagnosed T2DM and BMI ≥24, on oral hypoglycemic and/or insulin treatment ( | Decreased fasting serum glucose, HbA1c, lipid levels, and HOMA-IR. No effect on liver function biomarkers |
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| RCT phase 2 | 500 mg (≥95% curcuminoids, ≥65% curcumin)±30 mg zinc | 3 months | Overweight or obese subjects with prediabetes ( | Curcumin with and without zinc decreased fasting plasma glucose, postprandial glucose, serum insulin, HbA1c and insulin resistance. Increased insulin sensitivity. Curcumin + zinc group only decreased BMI. |
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| RCT | 1,500 mg (curcuminoids) | 9 months | Participants with prediabetes not taking medication ( | Decreased the risk of developing T2DM. Reduced fasting blood glucose, HbA1c, and C-peptide levels. Improved glucose tolerance, HOMA-IR and HOMA-β |
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| Quercetin | RCT | 250 mg | 8 weeks | Diagnosed T2DM and not receiving insulin treatment ( | No effect on fasting blood glucose, HbA1c levels, serum insulin, lipid levels, or HOMA-IR. Increased serum antioxidant capacity and decreased markers of oxidative stress |
|
| Meta-analysis | 100–1,000 mg | 4–12 weeks | Subjects with (pre)hypertension, polycystic ovary syndrome or T2DM, or were overweight or obese | Overall, no significant effect on fasting plasma glucose, serum insulin, HbA1c or HOMA-IR. Did decrease fasting glucose in studies ≥8 weeks and using ≥500 mg doses. Also decreased insulin levels in studies with participants <45 years and doses ≥500 mg |
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| Olive leaf extract/Oleuropein | RCT crossover | 51.1 mg oleuropein, 9.7 mg hydroxytyrosol | 12 weeks | Males with BMI between 25 and 30 ( | Improved glucose tolerance, insulin sensitivity and β-cell function. Increased IL-6 but no change in other inflammatory markers. No effect on lipid levels or liver function biomarkers |
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| RCT crossover | 136.2 mg oleuropein, 6.4 mg hydroxytyrosol | 6 weeks | Males with prehypertension ( | No change in fasting glucose, insulin or HOMA-IR. Decreased blood pressure and plasma lipid levels. Reduced IL-8 but no effect on other inflammatory markers |
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| RCT | 320.8 mg oleuropein, 11.9 mg hydroxytyrosol | 12 weeks | Participants with prediabetes and BMI between 23 and 29.9 ( | Decreased fasting plasma glucose and lipid levels, however increased HbA1c was observed. No change in insulin levels or HOMA-IR. |
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| RCT | 500 mg olive leaf extract | 14 weeks | Diagnosed T2DM and not receiving insulin treatment ( | No change in fasting or postprandial blood glucose but decreased HbA1c and fasting insulin levels |
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FIGURE 2Examples of the molecular structure of polyphenolic compounds that have been studied for antidiabetic activity.