Literature DB >> 12324666

Metabolic syndrome in the rat: females are protected against the pro-oxidant effect of a high sucrose diet.

Jérôme Busserolles1, Andrzej Mazur, Elyett Gueux, Edmond Rock, Yves Rayssiguier.   

Abstract

Metabolic syndrome is more prevalent in men than in women. In an experimental dietary model of metabolic syndrome, the high-fructose-fed rat, oxidative stress has been observed in males. Given that estradiol has been documented to exert an antioxidant effect, we investigated whether female rats were better protected than males against the adverse effects of a high-sucrose diet, and we studied the influence of hormonal status in female rats. Males and females were first fed a sucrose-based or starch-based diet for 2 weeks. In the males, the plasma triglyceride (TG)-raising effect of sucrose was accompanied by significantly lowered plasma alpha-tocopherol and a significantly lowered alpha-tocopherol/TG ratio (30%), suggesting that vitamin E depletion may predispose lipoproteins to subsequent oxidative stress. In males, after exposure of heart tissue homogenate to iron-induced lipid peroxidation, thiobarbituric reactive substances were significantly higher in the sucrose-fed than in the starch-fed rats. In contrast, in sucrose-fed females, neither a decrease in vitamin E/TG ratio nor an increased susceptibility of heart tissue to peroxidation was observed, despite both a significantly decreased heart superoxide dismutase activity (14%) and a significant 3-fold increase in plasma nitric oxide concentration compared with starch-fed females. The influence of hormonal status in female rats was then assessed using intact, ovariectomized, or estradiol-supplemented ovariectomized female rats fed the sucrose or starch diet for 2 weeks. After exposure of heart tissue to iron-induced lipid peroxidation, higher susceptibility to peroxidation was found only in ovariectomized females fed the sucrose diet compared with the starch group and not in intact females or ovariectomized females supplemented with estradiol. Thus, estrogens, by their effects on antioxidant capacity, might explain the sexual difference in the pro-oxidant effect of sucrose diet resulting in metabolic syndrome in rats.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 12324666     DOI: 10.1177/153537020222700918

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exp Biol Med (Maywood)        ISSN: 1535-3699


  15 in total

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4.  Mitoprotection attenuates myocardial vascular impairment in porcine metabolic syndrome.

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6.  Dietary green tea extract lowers plasma and hepatic triglycerides and decreases the expression of sterol regulatory element-binding protein-1c mRNA and its responsive genes in fructose-fed, ovariectomized rats.

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Review 8.  Iron Reshapes the Gut Microbiome and Host Metabolism.

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9.  17β Estradiol Modulates Perfusion Pressure and Expression of 5-LOX and CYP450 4A in the Isolated Kidney of Metabolic Syndrome Female Rats.

Authors:  A M Zúñiga-Muñoz; V Guarner Lans; E Soria-Castro; E Diaz-Diaz; R Torrico-Lavayen; E Tena-Betancourt; I Pérez-Torres
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10.  Maternal fructose intake induces insulin resistance and oxidative stress in male, but not female, offspring.

Authors:  Lourdes Rodríguez; Paola Otero; María I Panadero; Silvia Rodrigo; Juan J Álvarez-Millán; Carlos Bocos
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