4.5 Review

Gut microbiota as a target for prevention and treatment of type 2 diabetes: Mechanisms and dietary natural products

Journal

WORLD JOURNAL OF DIABETES
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 1146-1163

Publisher

BAISHIDENG PUBLISHING GROUP INC
DOI: 10.4239/wjd.v12.i8.1146

Keywords

Diabetes; Obesity; Gut microbiota; Mechanisms; Dietary natural products; Metabolites

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81803816, 82074078]

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The alteration of gut microbiota is closely related to the onset and progression of Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), with dysbacteriosis leading to endotoxin leakage and increased gut permeability, triggering the development of T2DM. Natural products are significant resources for discovering anti-T2DM drugs, with their mechanisms of action primarily involving the regulation of gut microbiota and metabolites.
Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is among the most remarkable public health concerns globally. Accumulating research evidence documents that alteration of gut microbiota has an indispensable role in the onset and progression of obesity and T2DM. A reduced microbial diversity is linked to insulin resistance and energy metabolism, especially for the rise of the Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratio. Changes in metabolites followed by the gut dysbacteriosis are linked to the presence of T2DM. Moreover, endotoxin leakage and gut permeability caused by gut dysbacteriosis is more of a trigger for the onset and progression of T2DM. Research documents that natural products are remarkable arsenals of bioactive agents for the discovery of anti-T2DM drugs. Many studies have elucidated that the possible mechanisms of the anti-T2DM effects of natural products are remarkably linked to its regulation on the composition of gut microflora and the successive changes in metabolites directly or indirectly. This review presents a brief overview of the gut microbiota in T2DM and several relevant mechanisms, including short-chain fatty acids, biosynthesis and metabolism of branched-chain fatty acids, trimethylamine N-oxide, bile acid signaling, endotoxin leakage, and gut permeability, and describes how dietary natural products can improve T2DM via the gut microbiota.

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