Abstract

Insulin mimic can promote transporting glucose to muscle tissue and accelerate glucose consumption. It is commonly occurring in many functional foods or traditional medicines. Anti-diabetes molecules from food sources are highly safe and suitable for long-term use to prevent early diabetes. The leaves of Acer truncatum was found glucose uptake promotion in our phenotypic screening. However, its bioactive components and mechanism are still unclear. We collected leaves from trees of different ages (2, 3, 4, 7 and 11 years old) and profiled the ingredients by LC-MS/MS. The essential active component (myricitrin) was acquired following bio-guide on a whole organism Zebrafish (Danio rerio). Its content in the leaves was not affected by tree ages. Therefore, myricitrin can serve as a quality mark for functional foods derived from A. truncatum leaves. The transcriptomic and metabolomic analysis in Zebrafish explored the differentially expressed genes and metabolites. Based on joint-pathway enrichment and qRT-PCR verification, the critical bioactive component myricitrin was found to affect toll-like receptors signaling pathways to regulate glucose uptake. Our findings disclosed a bioactive marker (myricitrin) in A. truncatum leaves and explored its regulation mechanism, which rationalized the anti-diabetes function of the herbal food.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDiabetes is a chronic metabolic disease that is hard to eradicate and accompanies severe complications, among which Diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) patients are mainly distributed in adults 20–79 years old [1]

  • In our phenotypic screening of food herbals, we found that the leaves of A. truncatum showed prominent promotion of glucose uptake

  • The component features in A. truncatum leaves had already been profiled on the basis of LC-MS/MS [15,18]

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Summary

Introduction

Diabetes is a chronic metabolic disease that is hard to eradicate and accompanies severe complications, among which Diabetes mellitus type 2 (T2DM) patients are mainly distributed in adults 20–79 years old [1]. T2DM was considered arising primarily from unhealthy diets, such as high-calorie food. Diet therapy might be used to prevent early diabetes development. Prevention is more practical than treatment when suffering from hyperglycemia disorder. Insulin is an essential regulator for maintaining glucose homeostasis in vivo, promoting glucose uptake into muscle and adipose cells to consume extra glucose. Those active small molecules that can improve glucose uptake are called insulin-mimic. Many insulins mimics were found in foods or herbs, such as coumarin [7]

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