4.7 Review

Communal interaction of glycation and gut microbes in diabetes mellitus, Alzheimer's disease, and Parkinson's disease pathogenesis

Journal

MEDICINAL RESEARCH REVIEWS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/med.21987

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; diabetes mellitus; gut microbiota; Parkinson's disease; protein glycation

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Diabetes and neurodegenerative diseases are increasing globally, and protein glycation and gut microbes are believed to play important roles in these conditions. Protein glycation can affect protein structure and toxicity, while gut microbes and their metabolites are associated with human health and diseases. Understanding the link between glycation, gut microbes, and these diseases is essential for developing therapeutic strategies.
Diabetes and its complications, Alzheimer's disease (AD), and Parkinson's disease (PD) are increasing gradually, reflecting a global threat vis-a-vis expressing the essentiality of a substantial paradigm shift in research and remedial actions. Protein glycation is influenced by several factors, like time, temperature, pH, metal ions, and the half-life of the protein. Surprisingly, most proteins associated with metabolic and neurodegenerative disorders are generally long-lived and hence susceptible to glycation. Remarkably, proteins linked with diabetes, AD, and PD share this characteristic. This modulates protein's structure, aggregation tendency, and toxicity, highlighting renovated attention. Gut microbes and microbial metabolites marked their importance in human health and diseases. Though many scientific shreds of evidence are proposed for possible change and dysbiosis in gut flora in these diseases, very little is known about the mechanisms. Screening and unfolding their functionality in metabolic and neurodegenerative disorders is essential in hunting the gut treasure. Therefore, it is imperative to evaluate the role of glycation as a common link in diabetes and neurodegenerative diseases, which helps to clarify if modulation of nonenzymatic glycation may act as a beneficial therapeutic strategy and gut microbes/metabolites may answer some of the crucial questions. This review briefly emphasizes the common functional attributes of glycation and gut microbes, the possible linkages, and discusses current treatment options and therapeutic challenges.

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