Bitter yet beneficial: The dual role of dietary alkaloids in managing diabetes and enhancing cognitive function

Author:

Alkanad Maged1ORCID,Hani Umme2ORCID,V Annegowda H1ORCID,Ghazwani Mohammed2ORCID,Haider Nazima3ORCID,Osmani Riyaz Ali M.4ORCID,M D Pandareesh5ORCID,Hamsalakshmi 6ORCID,Bhat Rajeev7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pharmacognosy Sri Adichunchanagiri College of Pharmacy, Adichunchanagiri University Mandya India

2. Department of Pharmaceutics, College of Pharmacy King Khalid University Abha Saudi Arabia

3. Department of Pathology, College of Medicine King Khalid University Abha Saudi Arabia

4. Department of Pharmaceutics JSS College of Pharmacy, JSS Academy of Higher Education and Research Mysuru India

5. Center for Research and Innovations Adichunchanagiri University, BGSIT Mandya India

6. Department of Pharmacognosy Cauvery College of Pharmacy, Cauvery Group of Institutions Mysuru India

7. ERA‐Chair in Food By‐Products Valorisation Technologies (VALORTECH) Estonian University of Life Sciences Tartu Estonia

Abstract

AbstractWith the rising prevalence of diabetes and its association with cognitive impairment, interest in the use of dietary alkaloids and other natural products has grown significantly. Understanding how these compounds manage diabetic cognitive dysfunction (DCD) is crucial. This comprehensive review explores the etiology of DCD and the effects of alkaloids in foods and dietary supplements that have been investigated as DCD therapies. Data on how dietary alkaloids like berberine, trigonelline, caffeine, capsaicin, 1‐deoxynojirimycin, nuciferine, neferine, aegeline, tetramethylpyrazine, piperine, and others regulate cognition in diabetic disorders were collected from PubMed, Research Gate, Web of Science, Science Direct, and other relevant databases. Dietary alkaloids could improve memory in behavioral models and modulate the mechanisms underlying the cognitive benefits of these compounds, including their effects on glucose metabolism, gut microbiota, vasculopathy, neuroinflammation, and oxidative stress. Evidence suggests that dietary alkaloids hold promise for improving cognition in diabetic patients and could open exciting avenues for future research in diabetes management.

Funder

Deanship of Scientific Research, King Khalid University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Clinical Biochemistry,Molecular Medicine,General Medicine,Biochemistry

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