McCarty Mark F
NutriGuard Research, 1051 Hermes Avenue, Encinitas, CA 92024, USA.
Med Hypotheses. 2005;64(4):848-53. doi: 10.1016/j.mehy.2004.03.037.
Recent prospective epidemiology links heavy coffee consumption to a substantial reduction in risk for type 2 diabetes. Yet there is no evidence that coffee improves insulin sensitivity and, at least in acute studies, caffeine has a negative impact in this regard. Thus, it is reasonable to suspect that coffee influences the risk for beta cell "failure" that precipitates diabetes in subjects who are already insulin resistant. Indeed, there is recent evidence that coffee increases production of the incretin hormone glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1), possibly owing to an inhibitory effect of chlorogenic acid (CGA -- the chief polyphenol in coffee) on glucose absorption. GLP-1 acts on beta cells, via cAMP-dependent mechanisms, to promote the synthesis and activity of the transcription factor IDX-1, crucial for maintaining the responsiveness of beta cells to an increase in plasma glucose. Conversely, the "glucolipotoxicity" thought to initiate and sustain beta cell dysfunction in diabetics can suppress expression of this transcription factor. The increased production of GLP-1 associated with frequent coffee consumption could thus be expected to counteract the adverse impact of chronic free fatty acid overexposure on beta cell function in overweight insulin resistant subjects. CGA's putative impact on glucose absorption may reflect the ability of this compound to inhibit glucose-6-phosphate translocase 1, now known to play a role in intestinal glucose transport. Delayed glucose absorption may itself protect beta cells by limiting postprandial hyperglycemia -- though, owing to countervailing effects of caffeine on plasma glucose, and a paucity of relevant research studies, it is still unclear whether coffee ingestion blunts the postprandial rise in plasma glucose. More generally, diets high in "lente carbohydrate", or administration of nutraceuticals/pharmaceuticals which slow the absorption of dietary carbohydrate, should help preserve efficient beta cell function by boosting GLP-1 production, as well as by blunting the glucotoxic impact of postprandial hyperglycemia on beta cell function.
近期的前瞻性流行病学研究表明,大量饮用咖啡可显著降低2型糖尿病风险。然而,尚无证据表明咖啡能改善胰岛素敏感性,至少在急性研究中,咖啡因在这方面有负面影响。因此,有理由怀疑咖啡会影响β细胞“功能衰竭”的风险,而β细胞功能衰竭会促使已具胰岛素抵抗的个体患上糖尿病。事实上,近期有证据表明,咖啡可增加肠促胰岛素激素胰高血糖素样肽-1(GLP-1)的生成,这可能是由于绿原酸(CGA,咖啡中的主要多酚类物质)对葡萄糖吸收有抑制作用。GLP-1通过依赖cAMP的机制作用于β细胞,促进转录因子IDX-1的合成与活性,而IDX-1对维持β细胞对血糖升高的反应性至关重要。相反,被认为引发并维持糖尿病患者β细胞功能障碍的“糖脂毒性”可抑制该转录因子的表达。因此,频繁饮用咖啡导致GLP-1生成增加,有望抵消超重胰岛素抵抗个体中慢性游离脂肪酸过度暴露对β细胞功能的不利影响。CGA对葡萄糖吸收的假定影响可能反映了该化合物抑制葡萄糖-6-磷酸转运蛋白1的能力,现已明确该蛋白在肠道葡萄糖转运中起作用。葡萄糖吸收延迟本身可能通过限制餐后高血糖来保护β细胞——不过,由于咖啡因对血糖的抵消作用以及相关研究较少,目前仍不清楚摄入咖啡是否会减弱餐后血糖的升高。更普遍地说,富含“缓释碳水化合物”的饮食,或服用减缓膳食碳水化合物吸收的营养保健品/药物,应有助于通过增加GLP-1生成以及减弱餐后高血糖对β细胞功能的糖毒性影响来维持有效的β细胞功能。