Sea Cucumber Plasmalogen Regulates the Lipid Profile in High-Fat Diet Mouse Liver via Lipophagy.
Zhigao WangXincen WangYan-Jun LiuXiaoxu WangNan MengPeixu CongYu SongJie XuChang-Hu XuePublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2024)
The sea cucumber plasmalogen PlsEtn has been shown to be associated with various chronic diseases related to lipid metabolism. However, the mechanism is unclear. Therefore, the present study used the sea cucumber plasmanylcholine PakCho as a structural contrast to PlsEtn and assessed its effect in 8 week high-fat diet (HFD)-fed mice. The lipidomic approach based on high-resolution mass spectrometry combined with molecular biology techniques was used to evaluate the mechanism of PlsEtn. The results showed that both PlsEtn and PakCho significantly inhibited an increase in mouse body weight and liver total triglyceride and total cholesterol levels caused by HFD. In addition, oil red O staining demonstrated that lipid droplets stored in the liver were degraded. Meanwhile, untargeted lipidomic experiments revealed that total lipids (increased by 42.8 mmol/mg prot; p < 0.05), triglycerides (increased by 38.9 mmol/mg prot; p < 0.01), sphingolipids (increased by 1.5 mmol/mg prot; p < 0.0001), and phospholipids (increased by 2.5 mmol/mg prot; p < 0.05) were all significantly elevated under HFD. PlsEtn resolved lipid metabolism disorders by alleviating the abnormal expression of lipid subclasses. In addition, five lipid molecular species, PE (18:1/20:4), PE (18:1/20:3), PE (18:1/18:3), TG (16:0/16:0/17:0), and TG (15:0/16:0/18:1), were identified as the biomarkers of HFD-induced lipid metabolism disorders. Finally, lipophagy-associated protein expression analysis showed that HFD abnormally activated lipophagy via ULK1 phosphorylation and PlsEtn alleviated lipophagy disorder through lysosomal function promotion. In addition, PlsEtn performed better than PakCho. Taken together, the current study results unraveled the mechanism of PlsEtn in alleviating lipid metabolism disorder and offered a new theoretical foundation for the high-value development of sea cucumber.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet
- fatty acid
- insulin resistance
- adipose tissue
- high resolution mass spectrometry
- body weight
- liquid chromatography
- poor prognosis
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- high fat diet induced
- randomized controlled trial
- skeletal muscle
- clinical trial
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance imaging
- single cell
- ms ms
- computed tomography
- binding protein
- low density lipoprotein
- high resolution
- endothelial cells
- room temperature
- genetic diversity
- simultaneous determination
- solid phase extraction