Egg white hydrolysate protects white adipose tissue against metabolic insult in deoxycorticosterone acetate-salt rats.
Camila Rodrigues MoroEdina da Luz AbreuSamia Hassan Husein KanaanAntonio MárquezJose Antonio UrangaLuciana Venturini RossoniDalton Valentim VassalloMarta Miguel CastroGiulia Alessandra WiggersPublished in: The British journal of nutrition (2024)
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of an egg white hydrolysate (EWH) to protect white adipose tissue damage from cardiometabolic changes induced by severe hypertension. Male Wistar rats were uninephrectomised and divided: SHAM (weekly subcutaneous vehicle (mineral oil + propylene glycol, 1:1)), SHAM + EWH (subcutaneous vehicle plus EWH via gavage, 1 g/kg per day), DOCA (deoxycorticosterone acetate diluted in vehicle subcutaneously weekly in subsequent doses of 20 mg/kg -1st week, 12 mg/kg - 2–3th week, and 6 mg/kg -4–8th week, respectively, plus 1 % NaCl and 0·2 % KCl in drinking water), and DOCA + EWH. Body weight gain, food and water intake, glucose and lipid metabolism were evaluated. Oxidative stress was assessed by biochemical assay and immunofluorescence for NOX-1, nuclear factor kappa B (NFκB), and caspase-3 in retroperitoneal white adipose tissue (rtWAT). Proinflammatory cytokines (IL-6 and 1β), CD163 + macrophage infiltration, and immunohistochemistry for TNFα and uncoupling protein-1 were evaluated, as well as histological analysis on rtWAT. Glutathione peroxidase and reductase were also determined in plasma. EWH showed hypocholesterolemic, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, and anti-apoptotic properties in the arterial hypertension DOCA-salt model. The results demonstrated the presence of functional changes in adipose tissue function by a decrease in macrophage infiltration and in the fluorescence intensity of NFκB, NOX-1, and caspase-3. A reduction of proinflammatory cytokines and restoration of antioxidant enzymatic activity and mitochondrial oxidative damage by reducing uncoupling protein-1 fluorescence intensity were also observed. EWH could be used as a potential alternative therapeutic strategy in the treatment of cardiometabolic complications associated with malignant secondary arterial hypertension.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- nuclear factor
- oxidative stress
- arterial hypertension
- anti inflammatory
- weight gain
- drinking water
- insulin resistance
- toll like receptor
- induced apoptosis
- cell death
- high fat diet
- signaling pathway
- body mass index
- dna damage
- diabetic rats
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- blood pressure
- rheumatoid arthritis
- single molecule
- reactive oxygen species
- clinical trial
- protein protein
- lps induced
- high intensity
- hydrogen peroxide
- randomized controlled trial
- human health
- amino acid
- risk factors
- climate change
- skeletal muscle
- health risk assessment
- risk assessment
- cell proliferation
- energy transfer
- health risk
- study protocol
- combination therapy
- blood glucose
- heat shock
- preterm birth
- inflammatory response