1. Long-term intake of ginger protease-degraded collagen hydrolysate reduces blood lipid levels and adipocyte size in mice
- Author
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Chisa Tometsuka, Noriko Funato, Kazunori Mizuno, and Yuki Taga
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,GDCH, ginger protease-degraded collagen hydrolysate ,Hyp, hydroxyproline ,Blood lipids ,White adipose tissue ,Fatty acid synthesis genes ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Triglyceride ,Hydrolysate ,Food processing and manufacture ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Adipocyte ,Internal medicine ,Casein ,medicine ,SREBP-1, sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1" to the behind of "prorine ,TX341-641 ,Fatty acid synthesis ,CHO, cholesterol ,PPARα, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha ,TG, triglyceride ,Gly, glycine ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,E-CHO, esterified CHO ,Lipid metabolism ,T-CHO, total CHO ,TP368-456 ,F–CHO, free CHO ,Endocrinology ,Cholesterol ,chemistry ,Pro, proline ,Collagen hydrolysate ,Research Paper ,Food Science ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Collagen hydrolysate has various beneficial effects, such as bone strengthening, joint/skin protection and lipid metabolism regulation. In this study, the anti-obesity activity of ginger protease-degraded collagen hydrolysate (GDCH) was evaluated in BALB/c mice fed diets containing 14% casein (control group) or 10% casein +4% GDCH (GDCH group) for 10 weeks. In the GDCH group, triglyceride (TG) and cholesterol (CHO) levels in blood and adipocyte size in white adipose tissue were significantly decreased compared with those of the control group. Further, gene expression related to fatty acid synthesis, such as acetyl-CoA carboxylase, fatty acid synthase and stearoyl-CoA desaturase, was decreased in the liver and white adipose tissue of GDCH-fed mice. On the other hand, single oral administration of GDCH did not result in decrease in blood TG and CHO compared with vehicle and casein in ICR mice pre-administered soybean oil. These results suggest that the GDCH-induced decreases in tissue and blood lipids occur through long-term alterations in lipid metabolism, not transient inhibition of lipid absorption. The lipid-lowering effects exhibited by partial substitution of casein with GDCH imply the possibility that daily supplementation of GDCH contributes to prevention/attenuation of obesity and hyperlipidemia., Graphical abstract Image 1, Highlights • Long-term feeding of ginger-protease degraded collagen hydrolysate (GDCH) in mice. • Blood triglycerides and cholesterol were decreased by GDCH intake. • Adipocyte size of white adipose tissue was reduced by GDCH intake. • Fatty acid synthesis genes were down-regulated by GDCH intake.
- Published
- 2021