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Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes

Obesity is associated with cognitive deficit and liver alterations; however, it remains unclear whether a combination of functional foods could reverse cognitive damage and to what extent it would be associated with changes in gut microbiota and liver. With this aim, male Wistar rats were fed a high...

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Autores principales: Syeda, Tauqeerunnisa, Sánchez-Tapia, Mónica, Orta, Itzel, Granados-Portillo, Omar, Pérez-Jimenez, Lizbeth, Rodríguez-Callejas, Juan-de-Dios, Toribio, Samuel, Silva-Lucero, Maria-del-Carmen, Rivera, Ana-Leonor, Tovar, Armando R., Torres, Nimbe, Perez-Cruz, Claudia
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8746716/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35010897
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu14010022
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author Syeda, Tauqeerunnisa
Sánchez-Tapia, Mónica
Orta, Itzel
Granados-Portillo, Omar
Pérez-Jimenez, Lizbeth
Rodríguez-Callejas, Juan-de-Dios
Toribio, Samuel
Silva-Lucero, Maria-del-Carmen
Rivera, Ana-Leonor
Tovar, Armando R.
Torres, Nimbe
Perez-Cruz, Claudia
author_facet Syeda, Tauqeerunnisa
Sánchez-Tapia, Mónica
Orta, Itzel
Granados-Portillo, Omar
Pérez-Jimenez, Lizbeth
Rodríguez-Callejas, Juan-de-Dios
Toribio, Samuel
Silva-Lucero, Maria-del-Carmen
Rivera, Ana-Leonor
Tovar, Armando R.
Torres, Nimbe
Perez-Cruz, Claudia
author_sort Syeda, Tauqeerunnisa
collection PubMed
description Obesity is associated with cognitive deficit and liver alterations; however, it remains unclear whether a combination of functional foods could reverse cognitive damage and to what extent it would be associated with changes in gut microbiota and liver. With this aim, male Wistar rats were fed a high-fat-5%sucrose diet (HFS) for 4 mo. And were then fed for 1 mo. with bioactive foods. At the end of this period, liver, serum, feces, intestine, and brain samples were taken. Body composition, energy expenditure, LPS, hormones, intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test, behavioral tests, and gut microbiota were evaluated. We showed that male rats fed high-fat-sucrose diet developed gut microbiota dysbiosis, increased in body fat, decreased antioxidant activity, decreased brain neuropeptide Y, increased the number of astrocytes and activated microglia, along with reduced spine density associated with deficits in working memory. Ingestion of a combination of nopal, soy protein, curcumin, and chia seed oil (bioactive foods) for three months was associated with an increase in a cluster of bacteria with anti-inflammatory capacity, a decrease in serum LPS levels and an increase in serum eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) with neuroprotective properties. In the liver, ingestion of bioactive food significantly increased antioxidant enzymes, decreased lipogenesis, reduced inflammation mediated by the TLR4-TNFα pathway along with a decrease in body fat, glucose intolerance, and metabolic inflexibility. Finally, neuroinflammation in the brain was reduced and working memory improved. Our study demonstrates that consumption of bioactive foods was associated with reduced liver, brain, and gut microbiota alterations in obese rats.
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spelling pubmed-87467162022-01-11 Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes Syeda, Tauqeerunnisa Sánchez-Tapia, Mónica Orta, Itzel Granados-Portillo, Omar Pérez-Jimenez, Lizbeth Rodríguez-Callejas, Juan-de-Dios Toribio, Samuel Silva-Lucero, Maria-del-Carmen Rivera, Ana-Leonor Tovar, Armando R. Torres, Nimbe Perez-Cruz, Claudia Nutrients Article Obesity is associated with cognitive deficit and liver alterations; however, it remains unclear whether a combination of functional foods could reverse cognitive damage and to what extent it would be associated with changes in gut microbiota and liver. With this aim, male Wistar rats were fed a high-fat-5%sucrose diet (HFS) for 4 mo. And were then fed for 1 mo. with bioactive foods. At the end of this period, liver, serum, feces, intestine, and brain samples were taken. Body composition, energy expenditure, LPS, hormones, intraperitoneal glucose tolerance test, behavioral tests, and gut microbiota were evaluated. We showed that male rats fed high-fat-sucrose diet developed gut microbiota dysbiosis, increased in body fat, decreased antioxidant activity, decreased brain neuropeptide Y, increased the number of astrocytes and activated microglia, along with reduced spine density associated with deficits in working memory. Ingestion of a combination of nopal, soy protein, curcumin, and chia seed oil (bioactive foods) for three months was associated with an increase in a cluster of bacteria with anti-inflammatory capacity, a decrease in serum LPS levels and an increase in serum eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) with neuroprotective properties. In the liver, ingestion of bioactive food significantly increased antioxidant enzymes, decreased lipogenesis, reduced inflammation mediated by the TLR4-TNFα pathway along with a decrease in body fat, glucose intolerance, and metabolic inflexibility. Finally, neuroinflammation in the brain was reduced and working memory improved. Our study demonstrates that consumption of bioactive foods was associated with reduced liver, brain, and gut microbiota alterations in obese rats. MDPI 2021-12-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8746716/ /pubmed/35010897 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu14010022 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Syeda, Tauqeerunnisa
Sánchez-Tapia, Mónica
Orta, Itzel
Granados-Portillo, Omar
Pérez-Jimenez, Lizbeth
Rodríguez-Callejas, Juan-de-Dios
Toribio, Samuel
Silva-Lucero, Maria-del-Carmen
Rivera, Ana-Leonor
Tovar, Armando R.
Torres, Nimbe
Perez-Cruz, Claudia
Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes
title Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes
title_full Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes
title_fullStr Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes
title_full_unstemmed Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes
title_short Bioactive Foods Decrease Liver and Brain Alterations Induced by a High-Fat-Sucrose Diet through Restoration of Gut Microbiota and Antioxidant Enzymes
title_sort bioactive foods decrease liver and brain alterations induced by a high-fat-sucrose diet through restoration of gut microbiota and antioxidant enzymes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8746716/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35010897
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu14010022
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