Levels of Fecal Procyanidins and Changes in Microbiota and Metabolism in Mice Fed a High-Fat Diet Supplemented with Apple Peel.
Salem ElkahouiCarol E LevinGlenn E BartleyWallace YokoyamaMendel FriedmanPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2019)
The potential for apple peels to mitigate the deleterious effects of a high-fat diet in mice was investigated here. Mice were fed a high-fat diet supplemented with apple powders from three apple varieties or a commercial apple polyphenol. Polyphenols were characterized using colorimetric assays and high-performance liquid chromatography. Mice were tested for standard metabolic parameters. There was a dose response to dietary apple peels, with the higher intake leading to reduced weight gain and adipose tissue mass relative to the lower intake, but none of the treatments were statistically different from the control. The gene expression of liver enzyme stearoyl-CoA desaturase (Scd-1) was correlated with adipose weight, and liver enzyme cytochrome P51 (Cyp51) was downregulated by the apple diets. The feces from a subset of mice were analyzed for polyphenols and for bacteria taxa by next-generation sequencing. The results revealed that the makeup of the fecal microbiota was related to the metabolism of dietary polyphenols.
Keyphrases
- high fat diet
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced
- weight gain
- gene expression
- body mass index
- high performance liquid chromatography
- weight loss
- type diabetes
- birth weight
- skeletal muscle
- dna methylation
- gold nanoparticles
- wild type
- mass spectrometry
- nitric oxide
- copy number
- simultaneous determination
- single molecule
- high resolution
- genome wide
- gestational age
- circulating tumor cells