Health Effects of Dietary Oxidized Tyrosine and Dityrosine Administration in Mice with Nutrimetabolomic Strategies.
Yuhui YangHui ZhangBiao YanTianyu ZhangYing GaoYonghui ShiGuo-Wei LePublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2017)
This study aims to investigate the health effects of long-term dietary oxidized tyrosine (O-Tyr) and its main product (dityrosine) administration on mice metabolism. Mice received daily intragastric administration of either O-Tyr (320 μg/kg body weight), dityrosine (Dityr, 320 μg/kg body weight), or saline for consecutive 6 weeks. Urine and plasma samples were analyzed by NMR-based metabolomics strategies. Body weight, clinical chemistry, oxidative damage indexes, and histopathological data were obtained as complementary information. O-Tyr and Dityr exposure changed many systemic metabolic processes, including reduced choline bioavailability, led to fat accumulation in liver, induced hepatic injury, and renal dysfunction, resulted in changes in gut microbiota functions, elevated risk factor for cardiovascular disease, altered amino acid metabolism, induced oxidative stress responses, and inhibited energy metabolism. These findings implied that it is absolutely essential to reduce the generation of oxidation protein products in food system through improving modern food processing methods.
Keyphrases
- body weight
- cardiovascular disease
- high fat diet induced
- amino acid
- high glucose
- diabetic rats
- healthcare
- public health
- drug induced
- magnetic resonance
- mental health
- mass spectrometry
- human health
- adipose tissue
- physical activity
- high resolution
- health information
- insulin resistance
- nitric oxide
- coronary artery disease
- big data
- metabolic syndrome
- wild type
- fatty acid