What the New Study Found
1. Chlorophyll Influences Glucose Absorption and Digestion
The review highlights that several chlorophyll derivatives — including pheophorbide a, pheophytin a, and pyropheophytin a — may help slow carbohydrate breakdown in the gut.
These compounds can:
- Inhibit α-amylase and α-glucosidase (enzymes that break starch into glucose)
- Increase resistant starch, slowing glucose release
- Reduce post-meal blood sugar spikes
This is the same mechanism used by pharmaceutical α-glucosidase inhibitors.
2. Chlorophyll May Improve Glucose Tolerance
Animal studies included in the review showed:
- Better glucose tolerance
- Reduced inflammation
- Improved gut microbiota balance
- Less obesity-related metabolic dysfunction
Chlorophyll appears to support more stable glucose metabolism through both digestive and microbiome pathways.
3. Chlorophyll Derivatives May Enhance Insulin Sensitivity
One of the most notable findings is that certain chlorophyll breakdown products can act on insulin-related pathways.
The review describes:
- Insulin-mimetic activity (increasing glucose uptake even without insulin)
- Improved insulin sensitivity via receptor modulation
- Reduced glycation, a key driver of diabetic complications
- Lower oxidative stress, which supports healthier cellular metabolism
These actions were particularly strong for pheophorbide a and related compounds.
4. Chlorophyllin Shows Promise for Blood Sugar and Liver Health
Chlorophyllin — a stable semi-synthetic derivative commonly used in supplements — demonstrated:
- Reduced oxidative stress
- Improved liver enzyme profiles
- Lower blood glucose in diabetic mouse models
- Improved lipid profiles
This is particularly relevant because metabolic dysfunction often affects both blood glucose and liver health.