The Potential of the Adzuki Bean (Vigna angularis) and Its Bioactive Compounds in Managing Type 2 Diabetes and Glucose Metabolism: A Narrative Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
3. Background for Adzuki Beans
4. The Role of Adzuki Bean Supplements in Managing T2D Outcomes
4.1. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Flour on T2D Outcomes
4.2. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Polyphenols on T2D Outcomes
4.3. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Polysaccharides on T2D Outcomes
4.4. Effectiveness of Extruded Adzuki Bean Proteins on T2D Outcomes
4.5. The Potential for Modifying the Antidiabetic Capacity of Adzuki Bean Supplements via Different Food Processing Methods
4.5.1. Effectiveness of Cooking on the Antidiabetic Capacity of Adzuki Bean Supplements
4.5.2. Effectiveness of Extrusion Cooking on the Antidiabetic Capacity of Adzuki Bean Supplements
4.5.3. Effectiveness of Germination on the Antidiabetic Capacity of Adzuki Bean Supplements
4.6. The Antidiabetic Capacity of Adzuki Bean Supplements, Comparing Their Capacity to Other Means Used to Manage T2D
4.6.1. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Hot Water Extract on T2D Outcomes when Compared to Sulfonylurea
4.6.2. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Polysaccharides on T2D Outcomes when Compared to Metformin
4.6.3. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Convenience Food on T2D Outcomes when Compared to Traditional Diabetic Low-Glycemic-Index Diets
4.7. The Antidiabetic Capacity of Adzuki Bean Supplementation via Improving Liver and Pancreatic Function
4.7.1. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Supplementation on Improving Pancreatic Function
4.7.2. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Supplementation on Improving Liver Function
4.8. The Role of Adzuki Bean Supplements on Insulin Signaling and Glucose Metabolism Pathways
5. Role of Adzuki Bean Supplementation in Managing Obesity Outcomes
5.1. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Flour on Obesity Outcomes
5.2. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Extract on Obesity Outcomes
5.3. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Polysaccharides and Protein on Obesity Outcomes
5.4. The Role of Adzuki Bean Supplementation in Adipogenesis and Lipolysis
5.4.1. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Supplementation on Adipogenesis
5.4.2. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Supplementation on Lipolysis
6. The Role of Adzuki Bean Supplementation on Dyslipidemia Outcomes
6.1. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Flour on Dyslipidemia Outcomes
6.2. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Extract on Dyslipidemia Outcomes
6.3. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Polysaccharides on Dyslipidemia Outcomes
6.4. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Protein on Dyslipidemia Outcomes
7. Effect of Adzuki Bean Supplementation on Gut Microbiota and Oxidative Stress
7.1. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean Supplementation on Gut Microbiota Outcomes
7.2. Effectiveness of Adzuki Bean on Antioxidative Outcomes
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
T2D | Type 2 diabetes |
PI3K | Phosphoinositide 3-kinases |
AKT | Protein kinase B |
HbA1c | Hemoglobin A1C |
BW | Body weight |
GABA | γ-aminobutyric acid |
SOD1 | Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase |
HOMA-IR | Homeostatic Model Assessment for Insulin Resistance |
Insr | Insulin receptor |
Irs-1 | Insulin receptor substrate 1 |
Pi3k | Phosphoinositide 3-kinases |
Akt | Proteinkinase B |
Glut-2 | Glucose transporter 2 |
Ppar-γ | Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ |
C/ebp-α | CCAAT-enhancer-binding proteins-α |
Lpl | Lipoprotein lipase |
Cd36 | Cluster of differentiation 36 |
Atgl | Adipose triglyceride lipase |
Hsl | Hormone-sensitive lipase |
Ppar-α | Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-α |
Cpt-1α | Carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1α |
Mcad | Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase |
LDL | Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol |
VLDL | Very-low-density lipoprotein cholesterol |
TG | Triglyceride/triacylglycerol |
HDL | High-density lipoprotein cholesterol |
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Country | Name | Description | Image | Ingredients |
---|---|---|---|---|
Japan | Steamed Adzuki Snack-Sweet Red Bean | Steamed adzuki bean | Organic adzuki beans, organic sugar, and water | |
Taiwan | Taitan Adzuki Bean with Black Glutinous Rice and Quinoa Instant Cereals | Adzuki bean and black glutinous rice mix | Adzuki bean, milk powder, black glutinous rice, quinoa, and other ingredients | |
Taiwan | Formosa Yay Imperial Mochi (Red Bean Filling) | Mochi with adzuki bean paste | Rice and adzuki bean paste | |
Japan | Pure Azuki Bean Tea | Adzuki bean tea bag | Adzuki bean | |
Japan | Tenzan Honpo Yokan Tsubuan | Japanese adzuki bean pastry | Adzuki bean | |
Japan | Ogura Komachi | Bread with adzuki bean jam added | No details provided | |
Japan | Tohato All Azuki (Red Bean) and Matcha (Green Tea) Snack | Pastry with adzuki bean and matcha added | No details provided | |
Japan | Morokoshi | Molded cake made from adzuki bean flour | Caster sugar, adzuki bean powder, and white bean paste | |
Japan | Oshiruko | Freeze-dried sweets adzuki (red bean) soup | No details provided | |
Japan | Dorayaki | Japanese pancake with adzuki bean paste filling | Sugar, egg, wheat, trehalose, adzuki beans, water, sorbitol, reduced sugar syrup, rice flour, glutinous rice flour, modified food starch, vegetable oil, baking powder, and honey | |
Japan | UHA High Concentrated Milk 8.2 Azuki Milk | Cow milk with adzuki bean flavor added | No details provided | |
Japan | Yamasan Kyoto Uji Japanese Mochi Candy | Candy with adzuki bean flavor added | No details provided |
Treatment | Outcomes Related to Diabetes or Glucose Metabolism/Pathways | Reference | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dose | Duration | Glucose-related | Insulin-related | Liver/pancreatic function-related and potential mechanism of action | |
Animal studies | |||||
150 g adzuki bean flour/kg diet/day | 12 weeks |
|
|
| (Zhao, Hou, Fu, et al., 2021) [36] |
200 mg adzuki bean extract/kg BW/day | 12 weeks |
|
|
| (Lee et al., 2022) [38] |
100 mg ABP/kg BW/day 200 mg ABP/kg BW/day 400 mg ABP/kg body BW/day | 4 weeks | Medium and high doses of ABP:
|
|
| (Wu et al., 2020) [37] |
1 g BAB extract and 0 g kaempferol/100 g diet/day 0 g BAB extract and 0.08 g kaempferol/100 g diet/day | 12 weeks |
|
|
| (Kim et al., 2016) [39] |
400 mg ABP/kg BW/day | 4 weeks | 3- and 4-week supplementation:
|
|
| (Wu et al., 2019) [40] |
300 g raw adzuki bean flour/kg BW/day 300 g cooked adzuki bean flour/kg BW/day | 8 weeks | 300 g/kg raw adzuki bean flour:
|
| (Zhao, Hou, Laraib, et al., 2021) [10] | |
500 mg of cellulose/kg BW/day 5000 mg of cellulose/kg BW/day 500 mg of EtEx. 40/kg BW/day 5000 mg of EtEx.40/kg BW/day | 7 weeks 4 weeks 1 week | 500 mg EtEx. 40 only:
| 5000 mg EtEx. 40 vs. 5000 mg cellulose:
|
| (Itoh et al., 2009) [41] |
100 mg EtEx.40/kg BW/day 500 mg EtEx.40/kg BW/day | 120 min |
|
|
| (Itoh et al., 2004) [42] |
200 mg ABE/kg BW/day 200 mg EABE/kg BW/day | 120 min |
|
| (Yao, Ren, et al., 2014) [43] | |
1% of EA 2% of EA | 6 weeks |
|
| (Yao et al., 2014) [44] | |
6 g AP/100 g diet/day | 12 weeks |
|
|
| (Zhao et al., 2022) [45] |
15 g GABA/100 g diet/day 25 g GABA/100 g diet/day 35 g GABA/100 g diet/day 35 g Adzuki bean/100 g diet/day 0.1 g GABA/kg diet/day 0.1 g Metformin/kg diet/day | 6 weeks |
|
|
| (Jiang et al., 2021) [46] |
| (Zhang et al., 2022) [47] | ||||
Human study | |||||
44.8 g ABE/day | 4 weeks |
|
|
| (Liu et al., 2018) [29] |
In vitro studies | |||||
0.025 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 0.05 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 0.1 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 0.2 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract | 96 h |
|
| (Kim et al., 2016) [39] | |
0.25 mg/mL ABTE, ABF, or ABS 0.50 mg/mL ABTE, ABF, or ABS 0.75 mg/mL ABTE, ABF, or ABS 1 mg/mL ABTE, ABF, or ABS | N/A |
|
| (Liu et al., 2017) [48] |
Treatment | Outcomes Related to Obesity and Dyslipidemia | Reference | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Dose | Duration | Outcomes related to obesity | Outcomes related to dyslipidemia | |
Animal studies | ||||
150 g adzuki bean flour/kg diet/day | 12 weeks |
|
| (Zhao, Hou, Fu, et al., 2021) [36] |
200 mg adzuki bean extract/kg BW/day | 12 weeks |
| (Lee et al., 2022) [38] | |
100 mg ABP/kg BW/day 200 mg ABP/kg BW/day 400 mg ABP/kg BW/day | 4 weeks |
| Low and middle doses of ABP:
| (Wu et al., 2020) [37] |
1 g BAB extract and 0 g kaempferol/100 g diet/day 0 g BAB extract and 0.08 g kaempferol/100 g diet/day | 12 weeks |
| (Kim et al., 2016) [39] | |
400 mg ABP/kg BW/day | 28 days |
| (Wu et al., 2019) [40] | |
300 g raw adzuki bean flour/kg BW/day 300 g cooked adzuki bean flour/kg BW/day | 8 weeks | Raw adzuki bean flour:
| Raw adzuki bean flour:
| (Zhao, Hou, Laraib, et al., 2021) [10] |
500 mg of cellulose/kg of BW/day 5000 mg of cellulose/kg of BW/day 500 mg of EtEx. 40/kg of BW/day 5000 mg of EtEx.40/kg of BW/day | 7 weeks 4 weeks 1 week | Weeks 1–7 (500 mg EtEx. 40 or 5000 mg EtEx. 40/day):
| Weeks 1, 4, and 7 (500 mg EtEx. 40 or 5000 mg EtEx. 40/day):
| (Itoh et al., 2009) [41] |
1% of EA 2% of EA | 6 weeks |
|
| (Yao et al., 2014) [44] |
1% HWE 5% HWE | 13 weeks |
| (Lee et al., 2019) [51] | |
1% HWE | 4 weeks |
|
| (Kitano-Okada et al., 2012) [31] |
1% BAB extract 2% BAB extract | 12 weeks |
| (Yook et al., 2017) [52] | |
150 g adzuki bean/kg diet/day | 12 weeks |
|
| (Zhao, Liu, et al., 2022) [32] |
100 mg ABE/kg BW/day 200 mg ABE/kg BW/day | 4 weeks | 200 mg ABE/kg/day:
| (Choi et al., 2020) [53] | |
1 g BAB extract/100 g diet/day 2 g BAB extract/100 g diet/day | 8 weeks | 1 g BAB extract/100 g/day:
| 1 g BAB extract/100 g/day:
| (Kim, Song, et al., 2015) [54] |
6 g AP/100 g diet/day | 12 weeks |
|
| (Zhao, Fu, et al., 2022) [45] |
60 mg/kg BW/day of ABTE, ABF, or ABS 300 mg/kg BW/day of ABTE, ABF, or ABS | 4 weeks |
|
| (Liu et al., 2017) [48] |
15 g GABA/100 g diet/day 25 g GABA/100 g diet/day 35 g GABA/100 g diet/day 35 g adzuki bean/100 g diet/day 0.1 g GABA/kg diet/day 0.1 g Metformin/kg diet/day | 6 weeks |
|
| (Jiang et al., 2021) [46] |
(Zhang et al., 2022) [47] | ||||
1% freeze-dried BAB powder 0.08% kaempferol | 12 weeks |
|
| (Kim et al., 2017) [55] |
Human study | ||||
44.8 g ABE/day | 4 weeks |
| (Liu et al., 2018) [29] | |
In vitro study | ||||
250 µg/mL adzuki bean polyphenols 500 µg/mL adzuki bean polyphenols 750 µg/mL adzuki bean polyphenols | 48 h |
|
| (Kitano-Okada et al., 2012) [31] |
0.5 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 1 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 1.6 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 2 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 2.5 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract 4 mg/mL BAB ethanolic extract | 72 h |
|
| (Kim, Park, et al., 2015) [56] |
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Share and Cite
Kwan, S.H.; Gonzalez de Mejia, E. The Potential of the Adzuki Bean (Vigna angularis) and Its Bioactive Compounds in Managing Type 2 Diabetes and Glucose Metabolism: A Narrative Review. Nutrients 2024, 16, 329. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16020329
Kwan SH, Gonzalez de Mejia E. The Potential of the Adzuki Bean (Vigna angularis) and Its Bioactive Compounds in Managing Type 2 Diabetes and Glucose Metabolism: A Narrative Review. Nutrients. 2024; 16(2):329. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16020329
Chicago/Turabian StyleKwan, Shu Hang, and Elvira Gonzalez de Mejia. 2024. "The Potential of the Adzuki Bean (Vigna angularis) and Its Bioactive Compounds in Managing Type 2 Diabetes and Glucose Metabolism: A Narrative Review" Nutrients 16, no. 2: 329. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16020329