Wheat bran oil ameliorates high-fat diet-induced obesity in rats with alterations in gut microbiota and liver metabolite profile.

IF 3.9 2区 医学 Q2 NUTRITION & DIETETICS Nutrition & Metabolism Pub Date : 2024-10-25 DOI:10.1186/s12986-024-00861-5
Huan Yan, Maierheba Kuerbanjiang, Dina Muheyati, Zhong Yang, Jia Han
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Abstract

Background: Obesity is one of the public health issues that seriously threatens human health. This study aimed to investigate the effects of wheat bran oil (WBO) on body weight and fat/lipid accumulation in high-fat diet (HFD)-induced obese rats and further explore the possible mechanisms by microbiome and metabolome analyses.

Methods: Fifty Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats were fed either a normal chow diet (B group, n = 10) or HFD (n = 40) for 14 weeks to establish an obesity model. The HFD-induced obese rats were further divided into four groups and given WBO at 0 mL/kg (M group), 1.25 mL/kg (WBO-L group), 2.5 mL/kg (WBO-M group), and 5 mL/kg (WBO-H group) by oral gavage for 9 weeks. The body weight of rats was weighed weekly. The gut microbiota structure was analyzed using 16 S rDNA high-throughput sequencing. The liver metabolite profile was determined using UHPLC-QE-MS non-target metabolomics technology.

Results: In this study, WBO treatment reduced body weight gain, fat and lipid accumulation, and ameliorated hepatic steatosis and inflammation. WBO treatment increased the relative abundance of Romboutsia and Allobaculum and decreased that of Candidatus_Saccharimonas, Alloprevotella, Rikenellaceae_RC9_gut_group, Alistipes, Parabacteroides, UCG-005, Helicobacter, Colidextribacter, and Parasutterella compared with the M group. A total of 22 liver metabolites were significantly altered by WBO treatment, which were mainly involved in taurine and hypotaurine metabolism, nicotinate and nicotunamide metabolism, phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis, phenylalanine metabolism, and ether lipid metabolism.

Conclusions: WBO alleviated body weight gain and fat/lipid accumulation in HFD-induced obese rats, which may be related to altered gut microbiota and liver metabolites.

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麦麸油能改善高脂饮食引起的大鼠肥胖症,同时改变肠道微生物群和肝脏代谢物谱。
背景:肥胖症是严重威胁人类健康的公共卫生问题之一:肥胖是严重威胁人类健康的公共卫生问题之一。本研究旨在探讨麦麸油(WBO)对高脂饮食(HFD)诱导的肥胖大鼠体重和脂肪/脂质积累的影响,并通过微生物组和代谢组分析进一步探索可能的机制:对 50 只 Sprague-Dawley (SD) 大鼠进行为期 14 周的正常饲料喂养(B 组,n = 10)或高脂饮食喂养(n = 40),以建立肥胖模型。HFD 诱导的肥胖大鼠分为四组,分别以 0 mL/kg (M 组)、1.25 mL/kg (WBO-L 组)、2.5 mL/kg (WBO-M 组)和 5 mL/kg (WBO-H 组)的剂量口服 WBO,连续 9 周。每周称一次大鼠体重。使用 16 S rDNA 高通量测序分析肠道微生物群结构。采用 UHPLC-QE-MS 非目标代谢组学技术测定肝脏代谢物谱:结果:在这项研究中,WBO 治疗减少了体重增加、脂肪和脂质积累,并改善了肝脏脂肪变性和炎症。与M组相比,WBO处理增加了Romboutsia和Allobaculum的相对丰度,降低了Candidatus_Saccharimonas、Alloprevotella、Rikenellaceae_RC9_gut_group、Alistipes、Parabacteroides、UCG-005、Helicobacter、Colidextribacter和Parasutterella的相对丰度。WBO治疗共显著改变了22种肝脏代谢物,主要涉及牛磺酸和低牛磺酸代谢、烟酸和烟酰胺代谢、苯丙氨酸、酪氨酸和色氨酸生物合成、苯丙氨酸代谢和醚脂代谢:结论:WBO 可减轻 HFD 诱导的肥胖大鼠的体重增加和脂肪/脂质积累,这可能与肠道微生物群和肝脏代谢物的改变有关。
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来源期刊
Nutrition & Metabolism
Nutrition & Metabolism 医学-营养学
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
78
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Nutrition & Metabolism publishes studies with a clear focus on nutrition and metabolism with applications ranging from nutrition needs, exercise physiology, clinical and population studies, as well as the underlying mechanisms in these aspects. The areas of interest for Nutrition & Metabolism encompass studies in molecular nutrition in the context of obesity, diabetes, lipedemias, metabolic syndrome and exercise physiology. Manuscripts related to molecular, cellular and human metabolism, nutrient sensing and nutrient–gene interactions are also in interest, as are submissions that have employed new and innovative strategies like metabolomics/lipidomics or other omic-based biomarkers to predict nutritional status and metabolic diseases. Key areas we wish to encourage submissions from include: -how diet and specific nutrients interact with genes, proteins or metabolites to influence metabolic phenotypes and disease outcomes; -the role of epigenetic factors and the microbiome in the pathogenesis of metabolic diseases and their influence on metabolic responses to diet and food components; -how diet and other environmental factors affect epigenetics and microbiota; the extent to which genetic and nongenetic factors modify personal metabolic responses to diet and food compositions and the mechanisms involved; -how specific biologic networks and nutrient sensing mechanisms attribute to metabolic variability.
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