AI Article Synopsis

  • Gypenosides, derived from Gynostemma yixingense, are traditionally used in Asian medicine for metabolic syndrome, but their action mechanism was unclear.
  • Chronic treatment with GP2, a gypenosides metabolite, protected mice from obesity and improved glucose tolerance by enhancing intestinal L-cell function.
  • GP2 works by inhibiting bile salt hydrolase, changing gut microbiota, increasing TβMCA levels, and promoting GLP-1 production, indicating its potential as a therapeutic agent for metabolic syndrome.

Article Abstract

Gypenosides, extracts of Gynostemma yixingense, have been traditionally prescribed to improve metabolic syndrome in Asian folk and local traditional medicine hospitals. However, the mechanism of its action remains unclarified. In this work, our results indicated that chronic administration of 2α-OH-protopanoxadiol (GP2), a metabolite of gypenosides in vivo, protected mice from high-fat diet-induced obesity and improved glucose tolerance by improving intestinal L-cell function. Mechanistically, GP2 treatment inhibited the enzymatic activity of bile salt hydrolase and modulated the proportions of the gut microbiota, which led to an increase in the accumulation of tauro-β-muricholic acid (TβMCA) in the intestine. TβMCA induced GLP-1 production and secretion by reducing the transcriptional activity of nuclear receptor farnesoid X receptor (FXR). Transplantation of GP2-remodelled fecal microbiota into antibiotic-treated mice also increased the intestinal TβMCA content and improved intestinal L-cell function. These findings demonstrate that GP2 ameliorates metabolic syndrome at least partly through the intestinal FXR/GLP-1 axis via gut microbiota remodelling and also suggest that GP2 may serve as a promising oral therapeutic agent for metabolic syndrome.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7499306PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41419-020-02974-0DOI Listing

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