Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and Periphery

Obesity and type-2 diabetes trends continue to worsen in the United States. Dietary anthocyanins (typically provided by berries and other fruits) are reported to have protective effects against both conditions using a variety of experimental research models including animal and human feeding studies...

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Main Author: Patrick Solverson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Cells
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/9/11/2515
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spelling doaj-644414a363f2432c88022708e437c7812020-11-25T04:11:49ZengMDPI AGCells2073-44092020-11-0192515251510.3390/cells9112515Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and PeripheryPatrick Solverson0Department of Nutrition and Exercise Physiology, Elson S. Floyd College of Medicine, Washington State University, 665 N Riverpoint Blvd, Spokane, WA 99210, USAObesity and type-2 diabetes trends continue to worsen in the United States. Dietary anthocyanins (typically provided by berries and other fruits) are reported to have protective effects against both conditions using a variety of experimental research models including animal and human feeding studies. This review highlights studies that explore the biochemical pathways in both tissue and rodent models which could explain clinical improvements noted with anthocyanin consumption. First, the primary mode of intestinal absorption of anthocyanins is through both sGLT1 and GLUT2 glucose transporters. Stronger binding affinities may allow anthocyanins to be more inhibitive to glucose absorption compared to the reverse, where GLUT2 expression may also be affected. Genetic or chemical inhibition of sGLT1 or GLUT2 demonstrate their essential function in anthocyanin absorption across the enterocyte, where the former interacts with a greater variety of anthocyanins but the latter is the major transporter for specific anthocyanin-glycosides. Once absorbed, anthocyanins positively modulate GLUT4 density and function in both skeletal muscle and adipose tissues via the upregulation of AMPK and restoration of insulin sensitivity. Antioxidant properties and phosphodiesterase inhibition by anthocyanins promote both mitochondrial function and density which could be novel targets for dietary management of obesity and its complications.https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/9/11/2515obesitytype-2 diabetesanthocyaninsGLUT2GLUT4AMPK
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Patrick Solverson
spellingShingle Patrick Solverson
Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and Periphery
Cells
obesity
type-2 diabetes
anthocyanins
GLUT2
GLUT4
AMPK
author_facet Patrick Solverson
author_sort Patrick Solverson
title Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and Periphery
title_short Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and Periphery
title_full Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and Periphery
title_fullStr Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and Periphery
title_full_unstemmed Anthocyanin Bioactivity in Obesity and Diabetes: The Essential Role of Glucose Transporters in the Gut and Periphery
title_sort anthocyanin bioactivity in obesity and diabetes: the essential role of glucose transporters in the gut and periphery
publisher MDPI AG
series Cells
issn 2073-4409
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Obesity and type-2 diabetes trends continue to worsen in the United States. Dietary anthocyanins (typically provided by berries and other fruits) are reported to have protective effects against both conditions using a variety of experimental research models including animal and human feeding studies. This review highlights studies that explore the biochemical pathways in both tissue and rodent models which could explain clinical improvements noted with anthocyanin consumption. First, the primary mode of intestinal absorption of anthocyanins is through both sGLT1 and GLUT2 glucose transporters. Stronger binding affinities may allow anthocyanins to be more inhibitive to glucose absorption compared to the reverse, where GLUT2 expression may also be affected. Genetic or chemical inhibition of sGLT1 or GLUT2 demonstrate their essential function in anthocyanin absorption across the enterocyte, where the former interacts with a greater variety of anthocyanins but the latter is the major transporter for specific anthocyanin-glycosides. Once absorbed, anthocyanins positively modulate GLUT4 density and function in both skeletal muscle and adipose tissues via the upregulation of AMPK and restoration of insulin sensitivity. Antioxidant properties and phosphodiesterase inhibition by anthocyanins promote both mitochondrial function and density which could be novel targets for dietary management of obesity and its complications.
topic obesity
type-2 diabetes
anthocyanins
GLUT2
GLUT4
AMPK
url https://www.mdpi.com/2073-4409/9/11/2515
work_keys_str_mv AT patricksolverson anthocyaninbioactivityinobesityanddiabetestheessentialroleofglucosetransportersinthegutandperiphery
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