Litcius/Paper detail

A proposed lectin‐mediated mechanism to explain the in Vivo antihyperglycemic activity of γ‐conglutin from <i>Lupinus albus</i> seeds

Madalena Grácio, João Rocha, Rui Pinto, Ricardo B. Ferreira, J Solas, Maria Eduardo Figueira, Bruno Sepodes, Ana Ribeiro

2021Food Science & Nutrition13 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

seed storage protein, by a mechanism not yet been clarified. Structural studies established that binding of γ-conglutin, in native and denatured form, to insulin occurs by a strong binding that resists rupture when 0.4 M NaCl and 0.4 M galactose are present, suggesting that strong electrostatic interactions are involved. Studies on binding of γ-conglutin in native and denatured form to HepG2 membrane glycosylated receptors were conducted, which reveal that only the native form of γ-conglutin with lectin activity is capable of binding to these receptors. Glycosylated insulin receptors were detected on purified HepG2 cell membranes and characterized by 1D and 2D analyses. Preclinical assays with male mice (CD-1) indicated that native and denatured γ-conglutins display antihyperglycemic effect, decreasing glucose in blood comparable after 120 min to that exhibited by the animal group treated with metformin, used to treat T2D and used as a positive control. Measurement of organ injury/functional biomarkers (hepatic, pancreatic, renal, and lipid profile) was comparable to that of metformin treatment or even better in terms of safety endpoints (pancreatic and hepatic biomarkers).

Topics & Concepts

In vivoLectinReceptorBiochemistryChemistryInsulinIn vitroBiologyPharmacologyEndocrinologyBiotechnologyBotanical Research and ChemistryPlant and fungal interactionsBiochemical and Structural Characterization