Literature DB >> 21086048

Effects of untreated and thermally treated lupin protein on plasma and liver lipids of rats fed a hypercholesterolemic high fat or high carbohydrate diet.

Corinna Brandsch1, Diana Kappis, Kristin Weisse, Gabriele I Stangl.   

Abstract

Lupin protein is capable of reducing plasma lipids in hypercholesterolemic man and animals. Whether lipid-lowering properties of lupin protein will be influenced by thermal treatment or by other nutrients has not been elucidated. In a two-factorial study, rats were fed hypercholesterolemic diets based on high amounts of carbohydrates (HC) or fat (HF), which contained either (20.4% of energy) untreated or thermally treated lupin protein (steam: 120 °C, 30 min) or casein as control protein. Lupin protein lowered plasma lipid concentrations in rats fed the HF diet but not in those fed the HC diet (P<0.05). Among rats fed the HF diet, plasma and VLDL triglyceride concentrations were lower in rats fed thermally treated (-46% and -44%, P<0.05) and untreated lupin protein (-47% and -46%, P<0.05) than in those fed casein; whereas liver triglycerides were reduced only in rats fed untreated lupin protein (P<0.05). Compared to casein, untreated lupin protein had slightly stronger cholesterol-lowering effects in plasma, LDL and HDL (-34%, -37%, -35%; P<0.05) than thermally treated lupin protein (-23%, -29%, -31%, P<0.10). In conclusion, the lipid-lowering effect of lupin protein strongly depends on composition of the basal diet, and thermal treatment is accompanied by a slight reduction of its hypocholesterolemic properties.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21086048     DOI: 10.1007/s11130-010-0201-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Foods Hum Nutr        ISSN: 0921-9668            Impact factor:   3.921


  21 in total

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