Effects of a combined intervention with a lentil protein hydrolysate and a mixed training protocol on the lipid metabolism and hepatic markers of NAFLD in Zucker rats
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/111655Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Martínez Martínez, Rosario; Kapravelou, Garyfallia; Donaire, Ana; Lopez-Chaves, Carlos; Arrebola Vargas, Francisco Jesús; Galisteo Moya, Milagros; Cantarero Malagón, Antonio Samuel; Aranda Ramírez, Pilar; Porres Foulquie, Jesús María; López-Jurado Romero De La Cruz, MaríaEditorial
Royal Society of Chemistry
Materia
Lentil Protein hydrolyzated Metabolic Syndrome Mixed training protocol Non alcoholic fatty liver disease
Fecha
2018-01-04Referencia bibliográfica
Martinez, R., Kapravelou, G., Donaire, A., Lopez-Chaves, C., Arrebola, F., Galisteo, M., Cantarero, S., Aranda, P., Porres, J. M., & Lopez-Jurado, M. (2018). Effects of a combined intervention with a lentil protein hydrolysate and a mixed training protocol on the lipid metabolism and hepatic markers of NAFLD in Zucker rats. Food & Function, 9(2), 830–850. https://doi.org/10.1039/C7FO01790A
Patrocinador
Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO, Spain) and the European Union through projects AGL2013-43247-R and DEP2014-58296- R, and the FEDER programResumen
Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of metabolic alterations characterized by central obesity, dyslipidemia,
elevated plasma glucose, insulin resistance (IR) and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). In this study,
a combined intervention of a lentil protein hydrolysate and a mixed training protocol was assessed in an
animal experimental model of genetic obesity and metabolic syndrome. Thirty-two male obese and 32
lean Zucker rats were divided into eight different experimental groups. Rats performed a mixed exercise
protocol or had a sedentary lifestyle and were administered a lentil protein hydrolysate or placebo. Daily
food intake, weekly body weight gain, plasma parameters of glucose and lipid metabolisms, body composition,
hepatic weight, total fat content and fatty acid profile, as well as gene expression of lipogenic and
lipolytic nuclear transcription factors and their target genes were measured. Obese Zucker rats exhibited
higher body and liver weight and fat content than did their lean counterparts. Such alterations were
related to modifications in aerobic capacity, plasma biochemical parameters of glucose and lipid metabolisms,
hepatic fatty acid profile and gene expression of nuclear transcription factors SREBP1c, PPARα,
LXR and associated lipogenic and lipolytic enzymes. The interventions tested did not affect body weight
gain but improved aerobic capacity, reduced hepatomegalia and steatosis associated with NAFLD and
relieved the adverse effects produced by this condition in glucose and lipid metabolisms through the
modulation in the expression of different genes involved in diverse metabolic pathways





