4.7 Article

Dietary Ginsenoside T19 Supplementation Regulates Glucose and Lipid Metabolism via AMPK and PI3K Pathways and Its Effect on Intestinal Microbiota

Journal

JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURAL AND FOOD CHEMISTRY
Volume 68, Issue 49, Pages 14452-14462

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.0c04429

Keywords

ginseng; insulin resistant; AMPK; diabetes mellitus; intestinal microbiota

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81903518]
  2. Doctoral Research Startup Fund Item of Liaoning Province [2019-BS-232]
  3. Liaoning (FGW) Engineering Technology Research Center for industrial chromatographic preparation of natural innovative drug materials [2017-1007]

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Ginseng, as a functional food, is widely used worldwide because of its multifarious benefits. Studies have verified that 25-hydroxyl-protopanaxatriol (T19) is a new ginsenoside from ginseng, which had an important inhibitory effect on a-glucosidase and protein tyrosine phosphatase 1B in vitro. This study aims to assess the regulation of T19 against glycolipid metabolism by insulin-resistant HepG2 cells and diabetes mice induced with high-fat diet combined with streptozotocin (STZ). T19 effectively lowered the levels of blood glucose and lipid, alleviated insulin resistance, and improved histological pathology of liver and pancreas. Further study demonstrated that regulation of AMP-activated protein kinase- and phosphoinositide-3-kinase-signaling pathways was involved in the potential mechanism of T19 efficiency. Simultaneously, high-throughput sequencing of 16S rDNA revealed that T19 remarkably ameliorated the high-fat diet/STZ-induced disorders of intestinal microbiota by decreasing the value of Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes, and remarkably raised the relative abundance of the Lachnospiraceae family, which are the beneficial bacteria that can regulate glucose and lipid metabolism. The results may provide clues for further understanding the mechanism of T19 in regulating glycolipid metabolism, and may provide a scientific basis for ginseng as a potential dietary food to prevent metabolic diseases.

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