| Literature DB >> 35164117 |
Nicole Stevens1, Kathryn Allred1.
Abstract
Cinnamon has been used as a flavoring and medicinal agent for centuries. Much research has focused on cinnamon bark powder, which contains antioxidants, flavonoids, carotenoids, vitamins, minerals, fiber, and small amounts of essential oil. However, isolated and concentrated cinnamon essential oil may also have important medicinal qualities, particularly in antidiabetic therapy. Some of the most common essential oil constituents identified in the literature include cinnamaldehyde, eugenol, and beta-caryophyllene. Due to their high concentration in cinnamon essential oil, these constituents are hypothesized to have the most significant physiological activity. Here, we present a brief review of literature on cinnamon oil and its constituents as they relate to glucose metabolism and diabetic pathogenesis. We also present molecular docking simulations of these cinnamon essential oil constituents (cinnamaldehyde, eugenol, beta-caryophyllene) that suggest interaction with several key enzymes in glucometabolic pathways.Entities:
Keywords: antidiabetic; beta-caryophyllene; cinnamaldehyde; cinnamon; cinnamon essential oil; eugenol; glucose metabolism; molecular docking
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35164117 PMCID: PMC8840343 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27030853
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Canonical Biochemical Pathways for Production of Volatile Compounds in Plants.
| Biochemical Pathway | Classes of Compounds | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Mevalonate | Terpenes and terpenoids | Beta-caryophyllene, limonene, pinenes, geraniol |
| Non-mevalonate, also called methylerythritol phosphate (MEP) | ||
| Shikimate | Alkaloids, phenylpropanoids, flavonoids, lignans, aromatic polyketides | Cinnamaldehyde, |
| Derivation of fatty acids | Fatty alcohols | Octanol, decanol |
Physical properties of cinnamon essential oil [24,25].
| Cinnamon Essential Oil | ||
|---|---|---|
| Physical Property | Typical Value | Range |
| Optical Rotation | −1 | −20–+20 |
| Specific Gravity | 1.02 | 1.01–1.07 |
| Refractive Index | 1.59 | 1.53–1.61 |
| Flash Point | 87 °C | 62–104 °C |
| Boiling Point | 248 °C | 248–249 °C |
| Color | Dark yellow | Yellow to light brown |
| Aroma | Spicy, sweet | Spicy, sharp, woody |
Comparative constituents of several cinnamon species. Common constituents in cinnamon essential oil extracted from various plant parts of Cinnamomum zeylanicum and Cinnamomum cassia [22,23,31,32,33,34].
| Composition | Composition | Composition | Composition | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| (E)-Cinnamaldehyde | 44.2–75.7% | Eugenol | 68.6–87.0% | (E)-Cinnamaldehyde | 42.4–89.4% | (E)-Cinnamaldehyde | 54.6–90.1% |
| Eugenol | 1.6–13.3% | Eugenyl acetate | 1.0–8.1% | (Z)-Cinnamaldehyde | 0.6–12.3% | (E)-Cinnamyl acetate | 1.4–12.5% |
| (E)-Cinnamyl | 0.3–10.6% | Linalool | 0.2–5.0% | (E)-Cinnamyl | 0.1–5.4% | (Z)-Cinnamaldehyde | 0.4–10.5% |
| Linalool | 0.2–7.0% | (E)-Cinnamyl | 0.8–4.6% | Benzaldehyde | 0.4–2.3% | Benzaldehyde | 1.1–6.3% |
| beta-Phellandrene | 1.5–8% | Benzyl benzoate | trace–4.1% | alpha-Terpineol | trace–2.0% | Eugenol | trace–5.8% |
| Beta-Caryophyllene | 1.3–6.9% | Beta-Caryophyllene | 1.9–4.1% | Coumarin | trace–1.9% | Cinnamyl | 0–5.7% |
| p-Cymene | 1.7–4.0% | Safrole | 0–1.3% | Salicylaldehyde | 0.04–1.8% | Salicylaldehyde | 0.05–3.1% |
| 1,8-Cineole | 0.4–2.3% | (E)-Cinnamaldehyde | 0.6–1.1% | Borneol | trace–1.3% | ⍺-copaene | trace–3.0% |
| Benzaldehyde | trace–2.2% | p-Cymene | 0.3–0.8% | Benzyl benzoate | trace–1.0% | Benzyl benzoate | trace–2.9% |
| alpha-Terpineol | 0.4–1.6% | Cinnamyl alcohol | 0–0.6% | Cinnamyl alcohol | 0–0.04% | Delta-Cadinene | trace–2.6% |
| Camphor | trace–1.4% | 1,8-Cineole | trace–0.6% | Coumarin | 0.03–2.5% | ||
| Beta-Phellandrene | 0.2–0.5% | Phenylpropanol | trace–1.6% | ||||
| ⍺-Amorphene | trace–1.1% | ||||||
| Anisaldehyde | 0–1.0% | ||||||
| (E)-Cinnamic acid | trace–0.9% | ||||||
| Methyl eugenol | trace–0.1% |
Experimental data for antidiabetic activity of cinnamon oil and some of its main constituents.
| Study Product | Study Type | Dosage | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cinnamon oil | Animal (Rat), KK-Ay | 25, 50, 100 | Significant decrease in fasting blood glucose, plasma C-peptide, serum triglyceride, total cholesterol, and blood urea nitrogen levels, with significant increase in high-density lipoprotein after 35 days. Glucose tolerance was improved and pancreatic | Ping, Zhang, and Ren (2010) [ |
| Cinnamon oil (encapsulated emulsion) | Animal (Rat), STZ | 200 or 400 | Both doses improved levels of glucose, insulin, SOD, GSH, amylase, lipid profile, and hepatic MDA. Gene expression was modulated to favor antidiabetic outcomes. Positive histological changes seen in liver and pancreas. | Mohammed, Ahmed, Sharaf, El-Nekeety, Abdel-Aziem, Mehaya, Abdel-Wahhab (2020) [ |
| Cinnamon oil | Animal (Rat), STZ | 200 or 400 | Treatment with encapsulated cinnamon oil showed improvement in all diabetes-related markers in STZ-treated rats, including liver and kidney function, insulin and glucose levels, lipid profile, and antioxidant enzymes. | Mohammed (2020) [ |
| Cinnamon oil | Animal (Rat), Alloxan | 5, 10, 20 mg/kg b.w., i.p. | Decreases in fasting blood glucose, total cholesterol, markers of kidney damage and glutathione were observed in treated animals. Histological studies of kidney showed reduced glomerular expansion and tubular dilatations. | Mishra, Bhatti, Singh, Ishar (2010) [ |
| Cinnamon oil | Animal (Rat), STZ | 100, 200, or 400 mg/kg b.w. | Treatment with cinnamon oil showed significant improvement in histopathology of testicular organs compared to untreated diabetic rats. | Budiastuti, Safitri, |
| Cinnamon oil | Human | 400 mg/day | Fasting blood glucose levels and insulin levels, along with Quality-of-Life measures, showed improvement after treatment with cinnamon oil, although results were not statistically significant. Pharmacokinetic data indicated low bioavailability. | Stevens (2020) [ |
| Cinnamon oil | Animal (Mouse), | 0.2 and 1.0 μL/cage, | Docking simulations showed interaction of cinnamon oil constituents with leptin receptor in olfactory bulb. In vivo studies confirmed interaction with leptin receptor resulting in decreased appetite and lower weight gain in treated mice. | Kusmardi, Tedjo, |
| Cinnamon oil | Animal (Rat), STZ | 5% cinnamon oil in commercial chow | Treatment with cinnamon oil resulted in decreased blood glucose, triglycerides, LDL-cholesterol, and ALT, while levels of HDL-cholesterol were increased compared to diabetic rats. | Zari, Al-Logmani (2009) [ |
| Cinnamon oil | Animal (Rat), Alloxan | 5, 10, 20 mg/kg b.w., i.p. | Cinnamon oil significantly ameliorated blood glucose levels and thermal hyperalgesia compared to untreated diabetic controls. | Bhatti, Kaur, Singh, |
| Cinnamaldehyde | In vitro (HEK293 and 3T3-L1) | -- | Cinnamaldehyde induced expression of | Li, Futakawa, Yamamoto, Kasahara, Tagami, Liu, and Moriyama (2015) [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Mouse), DIO-mice | 250 mg/kg/day | Cinnamaldehyde induced significant reduction in cumulative food intake, gastric emptying rates, and ghrelin. Upregulation of genes involved in fatty-acid oxidation was observed in adipose tissue, and mice showed improved glucose tolerance over | Camacho, Michlig, de Senarclens-Bezencon, Meylan, Meystre, Pezzoli, Markram, le Coutre (2015) [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Mouse), db/db | 0.02% added | Treatment with cinnamaldehyde improved aortic tone and function and normalized elevated kidney markers. Treatment also ameliorated glomerular fibrosis and renal dysfunction. Authors suggest a protective effect against vascular dysfunction by inhibiting oxidative stress via Nrf2 signaling pathway activation. | Wang, Yang, Wang, Yang, Wan, Liu, Zhou, Yang (2020) [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Rat), STZ | 20 mg/kg b.w. | Oral administration led to insulinotropic effects, with increased glucose uptake through GLUT4 receptors and improved function of pyruvate kinase and | Anand, Murali, Tandon, Murthy, Chandra (2010) [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Rat), FSD/STZ | 20 mg/kg b.w. | Gestating rats treated with cinnamaldehyde showed numerous improvements in health markers compared to diabetic controls, including improved lipid panels and glucose tolerance, more viable fetuses, and improved fetal glucose and insulin levels. | Hosni, Abdel-Moneim, |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Rat), FSD/STZ | 20 mg/kg b.w. | In rats with gestational diabetes, treatment with cinnamaldehyde prevented development of placental vasculopathy and fetal hypoxia while also alleviating maternal and fetal hyperglycemia. | Hosni, El-Twab, Abdul- |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Mouse), STZ | 20 mg/kg/day | Treated mice showed significantly improved insulin sensitivity and glucose metabolism, as well as positive changes in gut microbiota. Authors suggest that modulating host metabolomics may directly or indirectly affect expression levels of genes related to glucose metabolism. | Zhao, Wu, Duan, Liu, |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Rat), STZ | 20 mg/kg/day | Treatment with cinnamaldehyde prevented development of hyperglycemia and insulin resistance following STZ administration. | El-Bassossy, Fahmy, Dadawy (2011) [ |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Animal (Rat), STZ | 10, 20, 40 | Rats treated with cinnamaldehyde showed reduced blood glucose levels and amelioration of neurochemical and behavioral deficits seen in diabetic rats. Reductions in IL-2 and TNF-⍺ levels were also noted. | Jawale, Datusalia, |
| Cinnamaldehyde | Rat | 125, 250, 500 mg/kg b.w. | Pharmacokinetic determination of Cmax in rats administered 125, 250, and 500 mg/kg b.w. cinnamaldehyde was 249, 121, and 82 ng/mL serum, respectively. Estimated half-life of cinnamaldehyde was 6.2–6.9 h. | Zhao, Xie, Yang, |
| Eugenol | Animal (Mouse), STZ | 100 mg/kg b.w. i.p., 2× per week for 2 weeks | Significant reduction in advanced glycation end-products (AGE) and blood glucose | Singh et al. (2014) [ |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), STZ | Treatment with eugenol produced lower blood glucose, decrease in serum glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1C), lipase, and angiotensin-converting enzyme. Lipid panel levels were also positively affected. | Mnafgui et al. (2013) [ | |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), STZ | 2.5, 5, 10 | Eugenol improved blood glucose and HbA1C levels in diabetic rats and returned glucose metabolism enzyme levels to near normal. Body weight and liver function also improved. | Srinivasan et al. (2013) [ |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), FSD/STZ | 10 mg/kg b.w. | Levels of fasting blood glucose, insulin, triglyceride, cholesterol, and low-density lipoprotein were all improved. Glutathione levels were increased, as were GLUT4 and AMPK levels in skeletal muscle. Homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) was significantly lower in rats treated with eugenol compared to diabetic controls. | Al-Trad, Alkhateeb, |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), HFD | 20, 40 mg/kg | Plasma glucose and insulin levels decreased in a dose-dependent manner, and hepatic gluconeogenesis was inhibited via the CAMKK-AMPK-CREB signaling pathway. | Jeong, Kim, Quan, Jo, |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), STZ | 5, 10 mg/kg | Diabetic neuropathy parameters (both blood markers and histological changes) were ameliorated in diabetic rats treated with eugenol. Overexpression of TGF-β1 associated with diabetes was also reduced. | Garud, Kulkarni (2017) [ |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), STZ | 10 mg/kg | Diabetic rats treated with eugenol showed diminished oxidative stress markers and increased antioxidants. In the brain, levels of acetylcholinesterase and calcium were attenuated. Authors postulate that eugenol may help ameliorate diabetic complications due to oxidative stress. | Prasad, Bharath, Muralidhara (2016) [ |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), STZ | 2 mL/day of a | Oxidative damage was attenuated, and levels of antioxidants were returned to near-normal levels in diabetic rats compared to untreated controls. | Boroujeni, Dehkordi, |
| Eugenol | In vitro (Islets of Langerhans cells from male mouse) | 50, 100, 200 μM | Total antioxidant capacity, superoxide dismutase, and catalase levels increased in cells treated with eugenol following exposure to hydrogen peroxide to induce oxidative stress. Eugenol can bolster antioxidant systems in islet cells that are particularly vulnerable to oxidative stress in diabetics. | Oroojan, Chenani, |
| Eugenol | Animal (Rat), Alloxan | 5, 10, 15 mg/kg b.w. | Diabetic rats treated with eugenol showed lower fasting blood glucose, and improved morphology of liver and islet of Langerhans cells. | Hamdin, Utami, |
| β-caryophyllene | In silico | -- | β-caryophyllene showed affinity for interaction with insulin downstream signaling molecules such as IRS-1, cSrc, and Akt. | Mani, Balraj, Venktsan, Soundrapandiyan, Kasthuri, Danavel, Babu (2021) [ |
| β-caryophyllene | Animal (Rat), STZ | 10 mg/kg | Diabetic neuropathy was attenuated in rats treated with β-caryophyllene. Depression behavior and cytokine markers of diabetes were also reduced. | Aguilar-Ávila, Flores-Soto, Tapia-Vázquez, Pastor-Zarandona, López-Roa, Viveros-Paredes (2019) [ |
| β-caryophyllene | Animal (Rat), STZ | 200 mg/kg | Hyperglycemia was attenuated by treatment with β-caryophyllene, and oxidative stress was avoided through increased activity of antioxidant enzymes. | Basha, Sankaranarayanan (2016) [ |
| β-caryophyllene | Animal (Rat), STZ | 200 mg/kg | Plasma insulin levels were rescued to near-normal levels in diabetic rats treated with β-caryophyllene. | Basha, Sankaranarayanan (2015) [ |
| β-caryophyllene | Animal (Rat), STZ | 100, 200, 400 mg/kg b.w. | Administration of β-caryophyllene ameliorated STZ-induced changes in blood glucose, insulin levels, and glucose metabolism enzymes. The antidiabetic and insulinotropic effects were most pronounced at the 200 mg/kg dose. | Basha, Sankaranarayanan (2014) [ |
| β-caryophyllene | Animal (Rat), HFD | 30 mg/kg | Treatment with β-caryophyllene improved glycemic and lipidemic markers and reduced vascular oxidative stress and | Youssef, El-Fayoumi, Mahmoud (2019) [ |
| β-caryophyllene | In vitro (mesangial cells) | -- | β-caryophyllene modulated NF-κB and Nrf pathways and exhibited anti-inflammatory and nephroprotective activity in mesangial cells under high-glucose conditions. | Li, Wang, Chen, Yang (2020) [ |
| β-caryophyllene | In vitro (C2C12 myotubes) | -- | β-caryophyllene significantly increased skeletal muscle uptake of glucose and glycolytic production of ATP through cannabinoid receptor-2-mediated pathways. | Geddo et al. (2021) [ |
Figure 1Hypothesized interactions of cinnamon essential oil constituents with enzymes along glucose metabolism pathways.
Binding affinities of cinnamon essential oil constituents against selected glucose metabolism enzymes (all results in units of kcal/mol).
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| β-caryophyllene | −5.6 | −6.6 | −6.3 | −6.9 | −6.6 |
| Cinnamaldehyde | −6.5 | −6.1 | −5.8 | −5.4 | −5.5 |
| Eugenol | −6.0 | −6.7 | −6.0 | −5.6 | −5.6 |
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| Acarbose | -- | −8.3 | -- | −7.3 | -- |
| Piragliatin | -- | -- | −9.5 | -- | -- |
| TPICOOH | −9.7 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
| Benserazide | -- | -- | -- | -- | −7.4 |
Figure 2Molecular modeling of cinnamon essential oil constituents docked with PTP1B. (A) PTP1B antagonist TPICOOH and essential oil compounds cinnamaldehyde, beta-caryophyllene, and eugenol docked in the active site of PTB1B. (B) Close view of PTB1B antagonist TPICOOH and essential oil compounds cinnamaldehyde, beta-caryophyllene, and eugenol docked in the active site of PTB1B, specifically, near residues ARG47, ASP48, PHE182, SER216, ALA217, GLY218, ILE219, GLY220, ARG221, and GLN266. (C) TPICOOH docked in the active pocket of PTB1B, with a binding affinity of −9.7 kcal/mol. (D) Cinnamaldehyde docked in the active pocket of PTB1B, with a binding affinity of −6.5 kcal/mol. (E) Beta-caryophyllene docked in the active pocket of PTB1B, with a binding affinity of −5.6 kcal/mol. (F) Eugenol docked in the active pocket of PTB1B, with a binding affinity of −6.0 kcal/mol.
Figure 3Molecular modeling of cinnamon essential oil constituents docked with alpha-glucosidase. (A) Alpha-glucosidase antagonist acarbose and essential oil compounds cinnamaldehyde, beta-caryophyllene, and eugenol docked in the active site of alpha-glucosidase. (B) Close view of alpha-glucosidase antagonist acarbose and essential oil compounds cinnamaldehyde, beta-caryophyllene, and eugenol docked in the active site of alpha-glucosidase, specifically, near residues HIS 1584, TRP 1523, TRP 1418, ARG 1510, TRP 1355, PHE 1559, ASP 1526, TRP 1369, and PRO 1159. (C) Acarbose docked in the active pocket of alpha-glucosidase, with a binding affinity of −8.3 kcal/mol. (D) Cinnamaldehyde docked in the active pocket of alpha-glucosidase, with a binding affinity of −6.1 kcal/mol. (E) Beta-caryophyllene docked in the active pocket of alpha-glucosidase, with a binding affinity of −6.6 kcal/mol. (F) Eugenol docked in the active pocket of alpha-glucosidase, with a binding affinity of −6.7 kcal/mol.