Frontiers in Nutrition (Jul 2022)

Compound dietary fiber and high-grade protein diet improves glycemic control and ameliorates diabetes and its comorbidities through remodeling the gut microbiota in mice

  • Yinhua Ni,
  • Aqian Zheng,
  • Yating Hu,
  • Nianke Rong,
  • Qianpeng Zhang,
  • Wenmin Long,
  • Song Yang,
  • Sujie Nan,
  • Liqian Zhang,
  • Kexin Zhou,
  • Tianxing Wu,
  • Zhengwei Fu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2022.959703
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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Dietary intervention with a low glycemic index and full nutritional support is emerging as an effective strategy for diabetes management. Here, we found that the treatment of a novel compound dietary fiber and high-grade protein diet (CFP) improved glycemic control and insulin resistance in streptozotocin-induced diabetic mice, with a similar effect to liraglutide. In addition, CFP treatment ameliorated diabetes-related metabolic syndromes, such as hyperlipidemia, hepatic lipid accumulation and adipogenesis, systemic inflammation, and diabetes-related kidney damage. These results were greatly associated with enhanced gut barrier function and altered gut microbiota composition and function, especially those bacteria, microbial functions, and metabolites related to amino acid metabolism. Importantly, no adverse effect of CFP was found in our study, and CFP exerted a wider arrange of protection against diabetes than liraglutide. Thereby, fortification with balanced dietary fiber and high-grade protein, like CFP, might be an effective strategy for the management and treatment of diabetes.

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