by John Maher, DC, DCCN, FAIIM
Beta glucans are sugar molecules (polysaccharides), bound together as a
sugar/protein complex. Baker's yeast, oat and barley bran, and maitake and
lentinan mushrooms are naturally high in beta glucans.
Oat beta glucans help to:
- bind cholesterol and bile acids used to make cholesterol;
- reduce the elevation of blood sugar following a meal; and
- activate the immune system.
Most everyone is aware that oats, and especially oat bran-soluble fibers, help lower cholesterol. However, the polysaccharide most
responsible for this lipid-lowering effect is oat beta
glucan! 1
Oat bran, being high in soluble fiber, also slows down the digestion and
absorption of sugar, thereby lowering the glycemic load of a food. Oat beta
glucan may have an insulin-sensitizing effect as well. This is important, as
insulin resistance is a major preliminary factor in obesity, diabetes and heart
disease.2
Perhaps the most exciting but least well-known health benefit of beta glucans
has to do with their salubrious effect on the immune
system.3 Beta glucans stimulate white blood cells called macrophages (big eaters) into action. There are
actually locks (signal receptors) displayed by immune cells into which the beta glucan
keys (lectins) fit, activating the macrophages to do their job
"eat up" the cellular bad guys and their debris!
"Oat bran, being high in soluble fiber, also slows down the digestion
and absorption of sugar, thereby lowering the glycemic load of a food.
Oat beta glucan may have an insulin-sensitizing effect as well. This is
important, as insulin resistance is a major preliminary factor in
obesity, diabetes and heart disease."
Indeed, beta glucans both:
- stimulate the production of immune cells, and
- trigger a cascade of immune events, thereby boosting immune response
and overall resistance.
Of note, there appears to be a synergistic relationship between beta glucans
and vitamin C. In Japan, extracts containing various types of beta glucan, often
combined with vitamin C, have reportedly been used successfully to assist in
treating cancer patients for the last 20 years. Therefore, expect to see more of oat
beta glucans on the labels of some of the more functional food products.
References
- Braaten JT, et al. Oat beta-glucan reduces blood cholesterol concentration in
hypercholesterolemic subjects. Eur J Clin Nut Jul 1994;48(7):465-74.
- Braaten JT, et al. High beta-glucan oat bran and oat gum reduce insulin in subjects with
and without type 2 diabetes. Diabet Med Apr 1994;11(3):312-8.
- Anti-tumor effects: mediates destruction of malignant cells
[J Natl Cancer Inst 1975;54(3):571]; inhibits tumor growth & enhances survival rates
[Adv Exp Med Biol 1980;121A:269-290]; stimulates tumor cell destruction
[Scand J Immunol 15:297-304; Diss Abst Int
Sci 1987;48:1263]; improved host resistance to all types of different infections
[Trends in Pharm.Sciences 1983;433:344-347]; halts & reverses radiation damage
[Radiation Research 1989;117:59-69 / USAF Radiobioklogy Inst., Bethesda, MD]; immunomodulation and anti-cancer
activity of polysaccharide-proteincomplexes [Curr Med
Chem Jul 2000;7(7):715-29 / Ooi VE, Liu F.
Department of Biology, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, N.T., Hong
Kong. Click to view it online.
- Aoki T. Modulation Agents and Their
Mechanism. Richard L Fenichel, ed. New York:
Marcel Dekker, Inc, 1984, pp 63-77.
John Maher, DC, DCCN, FAIIM, was valedictorian of his Cleveland Chiropractic College-Los Angeles class. He has maintained an active alternative health care practice for over 20 years, and currently practices in San Diego, Calif. He is a certified anti-aging specialist (American Board of Anti-Aging Health Professionals), and a postgraduate faculty member of New York Chiropractic College and the Academy of Anti-Aging in New York. He can be reached at jmaher@biopharmasci.com. |