Allium-Derived Compound Propyl Propane Thiosulfonate (PTSO) Attenuates Metabolic Alterations in Mice Fed a High-Fat Diet through Its Anti-Inflammatory and Prebiotic Properties
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Vezza, Teresa; Garrido Mesa, José; Díez Echave, Patricia; Hidalgo García, Laura; Ruiz Malagón, Antonio Jesús; García García, Federico; Sánchez Santos, Manuel; Toral, Marta; Romero Pérez, Miguel; Duarte Pérez, Juan Manuel; Guillamón, Enrique; Baños Arjona, Alberto; Morón Romero, María Rocío; Gálvez Peralta, Julio Juan; Rodríguez Nogales, Alba; Rodríguez Cabezas, María ElenaEditorial
MDPI
Materia
Cytokines Dysbiosis Glucose metabolism Lipid metabolism Microbiota Obesity Organosulfur compound
Date
2021-07-28Referencia bibliográfica
Vezza, T... [et al.]. Allium-Derived Compound Propyl Propane Thiosulfonate (PTSO) Attenuates Metabolic Alterations in Mice Fed a High-Fat Diet through Its Anti-Inflammatory and Prebiotic Properties. Nutrients 2021, 13, 2595. [https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13082595]
Sponsorship
FEDER-INNTERCONECTA-CDTI program (CDTI, Centre for the Development of Industrial Technology) ITC-20181038; Junta de Andalucia CTS 164; Instituto de Salud Carlos III European Commission PI19/01058 European Commission Instituto de Salud Carlos III; European CommissionAbstract
Background: Propyl propane thiosulfonate (PTSO) is an organosulfur compound from
Allium spp. that has shown interesting antimicrobial properties and immunomodulatory effects
in different experimental models. In this sense, our aim was to evaluate its effect on an experimental
model of obesity, focusing on inflammatory and metabolic markers and the gut microbiota.
Methods and results: Mice were fed a high-fat diet and orally treated with different doses of
PTSO (0.1, 0.5 and 1 mg/kg/day) for 5 weeks. PTSO lessened the weight gain and improved the
plasma markers associated with glucose and lipid metabolisms. PTSO also attenuated obesityassociated
systemic inflammation, reducing the immune cell infiltration and, thus, the expression
of pro-inflammatory cytokines in adipose and hepatic tissues (Il-1ß, Il-6, Tnf-a, Mcp-1, Jnk-1, Jnk-2,
Leptin, Leptin R, Adiponectin, Ampk, Ppar-a, Ppar-g, Glut-4 and Tlr-4) and improving the expression of
different key elements for gut barrier integrity (Muc-2, Muc-3, Occludin, Zo-1 and Tff-3). Additionally,
these effects were connected to a regulation of the gut microbiome, which was altered by the high-fat
diet. Conclusion: Allium-derived PTSO can be considered a potential new tool for the treatment of
metabolic syndrome.