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Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice

We recently reported that epicatechin, a bioactive compound that occurs naturally in various common foods, promoted general health and survival of obese diabetic mice. It remains to be determined whether epicatechin extends health span and delays the process of aging. In the present study, epicatech...

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Autores principales: Si, Hongwei, Wang, Xiaoyong, Zhang, Longyun, Parnell, Laurence D., Ahmed, Bulbul, LeRoith, Tanya, Ansah, Twum-Ampofo, Zhang, Lijuan, Li, Jianwei, Ordovás, José M., Si, Hongzong, Liu, Dongmin, Lai, Chao-Qiang
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6355074/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30096038
http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201800554RR
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author Si, Hongwei
Wang, Xiaoyong
Zhang, Longyun
Parnell, Laurence D.
Ahmed, Bulbul
LeRoith, Tanya
Ansah, Twum-Ampofo
Zhang, Lijuan
Li, Jianwei
Ordovás, José M.
Si, Hongzong
Liu, Dongmin
Lai, Chao-Qiang
author_facet Si, Hongwei
Wang, Xiaoyong
Zhang, Longyun
Parnell, Laurence D.
Ahmed, Bulbul
LeRoith, Tanya
Ansah, Twum-Ampofo
Zhang, Lijuan
Li, Jianwei
Ordovás, José M.
Si, Hongzong
Liu, Dongmin
Lai, Chao-Qiang
author_sort Si, Hongwei
collection PubMed
description We recently reported that epicatechin, a bioactive compound that occurs naturally in various common foods, promoted general health and survival of obese diabetic mice. It remains to be determined whether epicatechin extends health span and delays the process of aging. In the present study, epicatechin or its analogue epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) (0.25% w/v in drinking water) was administered to 20-mo-old male C57BL mice fed a standard chow. The goal was to determine the antiaging effect. The results showed that supplementation with epicatechin for 37 wk strikingly increased the survival rate from 39 to 69%, whereas EGCG had no significant effect. Consistently, epicatechin improved physical activity, delayed degeneration of skeletal muscle (quadriceps), and shifted the profiles of the serum metabolites and skeletal muscle general mRNA expressions in aging mice toward the profiles observed in young mice. In particular, we found that dietary epicatechin significantly reversed age-altered mRNA and protein expressions of extracellular matrix and peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor pathways in skeletal muscle, and reversed the age-induced declines of the nicotinate and nicotinamide pathway both in serum and skeletal muscle. The present study provides evidence that epicatechin supplementation can exert an antiaging effect, including an increase in survival, an attenuation of the aging-related deterioration of skeletal muscles, and a protection against the aging-related decline in nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism.—Si, H., Wang, X., Zhang, L., Parnell, L. D., Ahmed, B., LeRoith, T., Ansah, T.-A., Zhang, L., Li, J., Ordovás, J. M., Si, H., Liu, D., Lai, C.-Q. Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice.
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spelling pubmed-63550742019-02-05 Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice Si, Hongwei Wang, Xiaoyong Zhang, Longyun Parnell, Laurence D. Ahmed, Bulbul LeRoith, Tanya Ansah, Twum-Ampofo Zhang, Lijuan Li, Jianwei Ordovás, José M. Si, Hongzong Liu, Dongmin Lai, Chao-Qiang FASEB J Research We recently reported that epicatechin, a bioactive compound that occurs naturally in various common foods, promoted general health and survival of obese diabetic mice. It remains to be determined whether epicatechin extends health span and delays the process of aging. In the present study, epicatechin or its analogue epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) (0.25% w/v in drinking water) was administered to 20-mo-old male C57BL mice fed a standard chow. The goal was to determine the antiaging effect. The results showed that supplementation with epicatechin for 37 wk strikingly increased the survival rate from 39 to 69%, whereas EGCG had no significant effect. Consistently, epicatechin improved physical activity, delayed degeneration of skeletal muscle (quadriceps), and shifted the profiles of the serum metabolites and skeletal muscle general mRNA expressions in aging mice toward the profiles observed in young mice. In particular, we found that dietary epicatechin significantly reversed age-altered mRNA and protein expressions of extracellular matrix and peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor pathways in skeletal muscle, and reversed the age-induced declines of the nicotinate and nicotinamide pathway both in serum and skeletal muscle. The present study provides evidence that epicatechin supplementation can exert an antiaging effect, including an increase in survival, an attenuation of the aging-related deterioration of skeletal muscles, and a protection against the aging-related decline in nicotinate and nicotinamide metabolism.—Si, H., Wang, X., Zhang, L., Parnell, L. D., Ahmed, B., LeRoith, T., Ansah, T.-A., Zhang, L., Li, J., Ordovás, J. M., Si, H., Liu, D., Lai, C.-Q. Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice. Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology 2019-01 2018-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6355074/ /pubmed/30096038 http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201800554RR Text en © The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Si, Hongwei
Wang, Xiaoyong
Zhang, Longyun
Parnell, Laurence D.
Ahmed, Bulbul
LeRoith, Tanya
Ansah, Twum-Ampofo
Zhang, Lijuan
Li, Jianwei
Ordovás, José M.
Si, Hongzong
Liu, Dongmin
Lai, Chao-Qiang
Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice
title Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice
title_full Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice
title_fullStr Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice
title_full_unstemmed Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice
title_short Dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice
title_sort dietary epicatechin improves survival and delays skeletal muscle degeneration in aged mice
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6355074/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30096038
http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.201800554RR
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