Skip to main content
International Journal of Experimental Diabetes Research logoLink to International Journal of Experimental Diabetes Research
. 2002;3(1):47–60. doi: 10.1080/15604280212528

D-Chiro-Inositol – Its Functional Role in Insulin Action and its Deficit in Insulin Resistance

Joseph Larner 1,2,
PMCID: PMC2478565  PMID: 11900279

Abstract

In this review we discuss the biological significance of D-chiro-inositol, originally discovered as a component of a putative mediator of intracellular insulin action, where as a putative mediator, it accelerates the dephosphorylation of glycogen synthase and pyruvate dehydrogenase, rate limiting enzymes of non-oxidative and oxidative glucose disposal.

Early studies demonstrated a linear relationship between its decreased urinary excretion and the degree of insulin resistance present. When tissue contents, including muscle, of type 2 diabetic subjects were assayed, they demonstrated a more general body deficiency. Administration of D-chiro-inositol to diabetic rats, Rhesus monkeys and now to humans accelerated glucose disposal and sensitized insulin action.

A defect in vivo in the epimerization of myoinositol to chiro-inositol in insulin sensitive tissues of the GK type 2 diabetic rat has been elucidated. Thus, administered D-chiro-inositol may act to bypass a defective normal epimerization of myo-inositol to D-chiro-inositol associated with insulin resistance and act to at least partially restore insulin sensitivity and glucose disposal.

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (240.1 KB).


Articles from International journal of experimental diabetes research are provided here courtesy of Wiley

RESOURCES