



Turmeric inhibits conversion of amino acids into glucose Gluconeogenesis is a useful process, but if muscle building is your hobby, you'd probably prefer it if it didn't work so well. Gluconeogenesis is the process in which amino acids are converted into glucose. But fortunately there's turmeric, and thanks to nutritionists at Auburn University we know that turmeric inhibits gluconeogenesis. Curcumin

The active substance in turmeric is curcumin. Take 4-8 g of the stuff and about 0.5 - 1.7 micromoles of it will reach your blood. That's not a lot. This is because enzymes easily convert curcumin [structural formula is top one here below] into dihydrocurcumin [second structural formula], tetrahydrocurcumin [formula 3], hexahydrocurcumin [formula 4] and hexahydrocurcuminol [formula 5]. What's more, other enzymes attach sulphates and sugar groups to curcumin analogues so that the body gets rid of them quickly. In their study [which by the way was not funded by the supplements industry] the researchers studied the effects of curcumin [Cur], its metabolite tetrahydrocurcumin [THC] and the C3 complex made by Sabinsa [C3] on liver cells. Curcumin preparations are being tested on diabetics because curcumin improves the glucose uptake of muscle cells. These researchers wanted to know whether curcumin also has effects in the liver, which may be useful for diabetics. Gluconeogenesis

To do this the researchers looked at gluconeogenesis, a reaction in which molecules like pyruvate, lactate, glycerol and – yes – the amino acids alanine and glutamine are converted into glucose in the liver. The amino acids come from the muscles, mostly in the form of a conversion product from other amino acids.



'The' hormone involved in the conversion of amino acids into glucose is cortisol. That's why strength athletes regard cortisol as a muscle growth enemy. And it's why the researchers exposed their liver cells to the cortisol based synthetic hormone dexamethason. Curcumin versis gluconeogenesis

The figures below show that dexamethason boosts the activity of the enzymes phosphoenol pyruvate carboxy kinase [PEPCK] and glucose6-phosphatase [G6Pase] in the liver cells. These are key enzymes in the process of gluconeogenesis. But when the researchers added Cur, THC and C3 to the liver cells, the activity decreased.















The metabolite THC [rather than Cur or C3] reduces the activity of G6Pase at concentrations a supplements taker could use. That means that the whole gluconeogenesis process goes more slowly. If the other curcumin metabolites have the same effect as THC, then you can expect curcumin supplementation to inhibit the conversion of amino acids into glucose. Source:

Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 2009 Oct 16; 388(2): 377-82.

More:

Turmeric boosts glucose uptake in muscle cells 13.01.2011

Turmeric reduces post strength training muscle damage 24.07.2009

Curcumin, the herbal clenbuterol 12.04.2009







