Cargando…

A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice

Tryptophan is an essential amino acid with a variety of bioactive metabolites including serotonin, melatonin and nicotinamide. Dietary Trp restriction results in increased lifespan but with detrimental side effects. The initial catabolite in the Trp breakdown pathway, kynurenine, increases with agin...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Isales, Carlos, Ding, Kehong, McGee-Lawrence, Meghan, Bollag, Wendy, Hill, William, Fulzele, Sadanand, Awad, Mohamed, Hamrick, Mark
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7740284/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.403
_version_ 1783623495341572096
author Isales, Carlos
Ding, Kehong
McGee-Lawrence, Meghan
Bollag, Wendy
Hill, William
Fulzele, Sadanand
Awad, Mohamed
Hamrick, Mark
author_facet Isales, Carlos
Ding, Kehong
McGee-Lawrence, Meghan
Bollag, Wendy
Hill, William
Fulzele, Sadanand
Awad, Mohamed
Hamrick, Mark
author_sort Isales, Carlos
collection PubMed
description Tryptophan is an essential amino acid with a variety of bioactive metabolites including serotonin, melatonin and nicotinamide. Dietary Trp restriction results in increased lifespan but with detrimental side effects. The initial catabolite in the Trp breakdown pathway, kynurenine, increases with aging and induces bone loss. Thus, we hypothesized that eliminating Trp in the diet of older mice might be osteoprotective. In an IACUC-approved protocol, we fed either 0, 0.2 (standard), 0.7 or 1.25% Trp-containing diets to aged (23-month-old) C57BL/6 mice for a planned eight weeks. There was a rapid decrease in body weight in the mice fed the 0% tryptophan diet and the mice had to be sacrificed at three weeks (25.2±1.4 vs 35.4±3.6 vs 33.9±2.4 vs 33.4±3.1 gm, (Means+SD, No Trp: 0%; Standard Trp 0.2%; High Trp: 0.7%; High Trp: 1.25%, p=0.0004, 0 vs 0.2%, n=9-10/group). Removal of Trp from the diet had a differential effect on bone mineral density (BMD). Total BMD was increased in the low Trp group: (0.0548±0.0017 vs 0.518±0.0021 vs 0.0526±0.0021 vs 0.0524±0.0022, Means+SD, No Trp: 0%; Standard Trp 0.2%; High Trp: 0.7%; High Trp: 1.25%, p=0.016, 0 vs 0.2%). Femoral BMD did not change; however, spinal BMD rose (0.0603±0.005 vs 0.0477±0.06 vs 0.0505±0.005 vs 0.0535±006; Means+SD, Trp 0% vs 0.2%, p=0.00009). The mice on the 0% Trp diet also had lower body fat (22.4±2.3% vs 26.7±3.3%; Means+SD, Trp 0 vs 0.2%, p=0.005). Thus, dietary Trp restriction resulted in a beneficial increase in spinal BMD, though at least in part related to weight loss.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-7740284
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2020
publisher Oxford University Press
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-77402842020-12-21 A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice Isales, Carlos Ding, Kehong McGee-Lawrence, Meghan Bollag, Wendy Hill, William Fulzele, Sadanand Awad, Mohamed Hamrick, Mark Innov Aging Abstracts Tryptophan is an essential amino acid with a variety of bioactive metabolites including serotonin, melatonin and nicotinamide. Dietary Trp restriction results in increased lifespan but with detrimental side effects. The initial catabolite in the Trp breakdown pathway, kynurenine, increases with aging and induces bone loss. Thus, we hypothesized that eliminating Trp in the diet of older mice might be osteoprotective. In an IACUC-approved protocol, we fed either 0, 0.2 (standard), 0.7 or 1.25% Trp-containing diets to aged (23-month-old) C57BL/6 mice for a planned eight weeks. There was a rapid decrease in body weight in the mice fed the 0% tryptophan diet and the mice had to be sacrificed at three weeks (25.2±1.4 vs 35.4±3.6 vs 33.9±2.4 vs 33.4±3.1 gm, (Means+SD, No Trp: 0%; Standard Trp 0.2%; High Trp: 0.7%; High Trp: 1.25%, p=0.0004, 0 vs 0.2%, n=9-10/group). Removal of Trp from the diet had a differential effect on bone mineral density (BMD). Total BMD was increased in the low Trp group: (0.0548±0.0017 vs 0.518±0.0021 vs 0.0526±0.0021 vs 0.0524±0.0022, Means+SD, No Trp: 0%; Standard Trp 0.2%; High Trp: 0.7%; High Trp: 1.25%, p=0.016, 0 vs 0.2%). Femoral BMD did not change; however, spinal BMD rose (0.0603±0.005 vs 0.0477±0.06 vs 0.0505±0.005 vs 0.0535±006; Means+SD, Trp 0% vs 0.2%, p=0.00009). The mice on the 0% Trp diet also had lower body fat (22.4±2.3% vs 26.7±3.3%; Means+SD, Trp 0 vs 0.2%, p=0.005). Thus, dietary Trp restriction resulted in a beneficial increase in spinal BMD, though at least in part related to weight loss. Oxford University Press 2020-12-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7740284/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.403 Text en © The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Isales, Carlos
Ding, Kehong
McGee-Lawrence, Meghan
Bollag, Wendy
Hill, William
Fulzele, Sadanand
Awad, Mohamed
Hamrick, Mark
A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice
title A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice
title_full A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice
title_fullStr A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice
title_full_unstemmed A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice
title_short A 3-Week Tryptophan-Deficient Diet Resulted in Decreased Body Weight and Increased Trabecular Bone Mass in Mice
title_sort 3-week tryptophan-deficient diet resulted in decreased body weight and increased trabecular bone mass in mice
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7740284/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igaa057.403
work_keys_str_mv AT isalescarlos a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT dingkehong a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT mcgeelawrencemeghan a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT bollagwendy a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT hillwilliam a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT fulzelesadanand a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT awadmohamed a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT hamrickmark a3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT isalescarlos 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT dingkehong 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT mcgeelawrencemeghan 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT bollagwendy 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT hillwilliam 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT fulzelesadanand 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT awadmohamed 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice
AT hamrickmark 3weektryptophandeficientdietresultedindecreasedbodyweightandincreasedtrabecularbonemassinmice