Revealing the mechanism of quinoa on type 2 diabetes based on intestinal flora and taste pathways

Author:

Zheng Chun‐Yan1,An Tian2,Liang Zheng‐Ting3,Lv Bo‐Han1,Liu Yu‐Tong45,Hu Xue‐Hong1,Zhang Yue‐Lin1,Liu Nan‐Nan1,Tao Si‐Yu1,Deng Ru‐Xue1,Liu Jia‐Xian45,Jiang Guang‐Jian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Traditional Chinese Medicine School Beijing University of Chinese Medicine Beijing China

2. School of Traditional Chinese Medicine Capital Medical University Beijing China

3. Traditional Chinese Medicine School Xinjiang Medical University Xinjiang China

4. Gansu Pure High‐Land Agricultural Science and Technology Limited Company Lanzhou China

5. Zhong Li Science and Technology Limited Company Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractTo investigate the antidiabetic effects and mechanisms of quinoa on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) mice model. In this context, we induced the T2DM mice model with a high‐fat diet (HFD) combined with streptozotocin (STZ), followed by treatment with a quinoa diet. To explore the impact of quinoa on the intestinal flora, we predicted and validated its potential mechanism of hypoglycemic effect through network pharmacology, molecular docking, western blot, and immunohistochemistry (IHC). We found that quinoa could significantly improve abnormal glucolipid metabolism in T2DM mice. Further analysis showed that quinoa contributed to the improvement of gut microbiota composition positively. Moreover, it could downregulate the expression of TAS1R3 and TRPM5 in the colon. A total of 72 active components were identified by network pharmacology. Among them, TAS1R3 and TRPM5 were successfully docked with the core components of quinoa. These findings confirm that quinoa may exert hypoglycemic effects through gut microbiota and the TAS1R3/TRPM5 taste signaling pathway.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Food Science

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