Ingestion of Gouda Cheese Ameliorates the Chronic Unpredictable Mild Stress in Mice.
Bohyun YunJa Yeon YooMi Ri ParkSangdon RyuWoong Ji LeeHye Jin ChoiMin Kyoung KangYoung Hoon KimSangnam OhPublished in: Food science of animal resources (2020)
Depression is a kind of mood disorder characterized by decline in motivation, interest, attention, mental activity, and appetite. Although depression is caused by a variety of causes, including genetic, endocrine and environmental stress, mild depression has been reported to improve with diet. Therefore, various type of food sources including functional and nutritional supplement are required to treat the depressive patients. Cheese contains bioactive peptides that have beneficial effects on host health. In particular, Jersey milk has been reported to contain higher solids than does Holstein milk. This study investigated the effects of Gouda cheese from Jersey and Holstein milk on chronic, unpredictable, mildly stressed (CUMS) mice. Here, spontaneous alterations in cheese-fed stressed mice were noted to be effectively recovered with statistical significance regardless cow species. Interestingly, for the analysis of fecal microbiota, Bacteroidetes were noted to increase with a reduction in Firmicutes at the phylum level with Jersey cheese. Taken together, we suggest that cheese intake provided a beneficial effect on stressed mice in recovering recognition ability. In particular, changes in internal microbiota were observed, suggesting that the bioactive ingredients in cheese act as improvement agents with respect to mood and brain function.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet induced
- sleep quality
- lactic acid
- stress induced
- depressive symptoms
- bipolar disorder
- end stage renal disease
- heat stress
- public health
- mental health
- healthcare
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- weight loss
- ejection fraction
- dairy cows
- wild type
- type diabetes
- body mass index
- adipose tissue
- working memory
- drinking water
- prognostic factors
- metabolic syndrome
- dna methylation
- mass spectrometry
- brain injury
- genetic diversity