| Literature DB >> 23320036 |
Xiaobo Ding1, Shengjie Fan, Yan Lu, Yu Zhang, Ming Gu, Lu Zhang, Gaigai Liu, Lu Guo, Dong Jiang, Xiong Lu, Yiming Li, Zhiqin Zhou, Cheng Huang.
Abstract
Obesity is a common nutritional disorder associated with type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular diseases, dyslipidemia, and certain cancers. In this study, we investigated the effects of Citrus ichangensis peel extract (CIE) in high-fat (HF) diet-induced obesity mice. Female C57BL/6 mice were fed a chow diet or an HF diet alone or supplemented with 1% w/w CIE for 8 weeks. We found that CIE treatment could lower blood glucose level and improve glucose tolerance. In the HF+CIE group, body weight gain, serum total cholesterol (TC) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-c) levels, and liver triglyceride (TG) and TC concentrations were significantly (P < 0.05) decreased relative to those in the HF group. To elucidate the mechanism of CIE on the metabolism of glucose and lipid, related genes expression in liver were examined. In liver tissue, CIE significantly decreased the mRNA expression levels of peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor γ (PPARγ) and its target genes, such as fatty acid synthase (FAS) and acyl-CoA oxidase (ACO). Moreover, CIE also decreased the expression of liver X receptor (LXR) α and β which are involved in lipid and glucose metabolism. These results suggest that CIE administration could alleviate obesity and related metabolic disorders in HF diet-induced obesity mice through the inhibition of PPARγ and LXR signaling.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 23320036 PMCID: PMC3536358 DOI: 10.1155/2012/678592
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Evid Based Complement Alternat Med ISSN: 1741-427X Impact factor: 2.629
Sequences of the primers used in real-time PCR.
| Gene | Forward primer | Reverse primer |
|---|---|---|
|
| TGTCCACCTTCCAGCAGATGT | AGCTCAGTAACAGTCCGCCTAGA |
| LXR | GAGTGTCGACTTCGCAAATGC | CCTCTTCTTGCCGCTTCAGT |
| LXR | CAGGCTTGCAGGTGGAATTC | ATGGCGATAAGCAAGGCATACT |
| ABCA1 | GGCAATGAGTGTGCCAGAGTTA | TAGTCACATGTGGCACCGTTTT |
| ABCG1 | TCCCCACCTGTAAGTAATTGCA | TCGGACCCTTATCATTCTCTACAGA |
| ApoE | GAACCGCTTCTGGGATTACCT | TCAGTGCCGTCAGTTCTTGTG |
| CYP7A1 | GTGGTAGTGAGCTGTTGCATATGG | CACAGCCCAGGTATGGAATCA |
| SREBP1 | GGCTATTCCGTGAACATCTCCTA | ATCCAAGGGCATCTGAGAACTC |
| LPL | ATCGGAGAACTGCTCATGATGA | CGGATCCTCTCGATGACGAA |
| PGC-1 | GGGTGCGCCTCCAAGTG | TCTACAGACAGAAGATGTTATGTGAACAC |
| PPAR | CGCTGATGCACTGCCTATGA | AGAGGTCCACAGAGCTGATTCC |
| aP2 | CATGGCCAAGCCCAACAT | CGCCCAGTTTGAAGGAAATC |
| ACC | GAATCTCCTGGTGACAATGCTTATT | GGTCTTGCTGAGTTGGGTTAGCT |
| ACO | CAGCACTGGTCTCCGTCATG | CTCCGGACTACCATCCAAGATG |
| UCP-2 | GGGCACTGCAAGCATGTGTA | TCAGATTCCTGGGCAAGTCACT |
| CD36 | GCTTGCAACTGTCAGCACAT | GCCTTGCTGTAGCCAAGAAC |
| FAS | CTGAGATCCCAGCACTTCTTGA | GCCTCCGAAGCCAAATGAG |
Figure 1HPLC chromatograms of major flavonoids of citrus peel extract (CIE). (a) (1) Neoeriocitrin; (2) narirutin; (3) naringin; (4) hesperidin; (5) neohesperidin; (6) poncirin; (7) naringenin; (8) nobiletin; (9) tangeretin were analyzed as standards. (b) The major flavonoid components of CIE were determined to be compared to retention time of the chromatogram of standard: (3) naringin; (4) hesperidin; (6) poncirin.
Figure 2CIE prevents HF diet-induced weight gain. C57BL/6 mice were fed a chow diet (Chow) or an HF diet alone (HF) or supplemented with 1% of CIE (HF+CIE) for 8 weeks. (a) Body weight change; (b) food intake expressed as g/day/mouse; (c) TG concentrations in fecal material; (d) TC concentrations in fecal material; (e) epididymal WAT morphology are shown at 200x; (f) size of adipocytes. Values are expressed as means ± S.E. (n = 7; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 versus the HF group).
Figure 3CIE decreases the blood glucose and serum lipid levels in HF diet-fed mice. Mice were fed a chow diet (Chow) or an HF diet alone (HF) or supplemented with 1% of CIE (HF+CIE) for 8 weeks. (a) Fasting blood glucose concentration. The mice were fasted for 12 hours and the tail vein blood was used to test the glucose level. (b) Glucose tolerance test was performed by intraperitoneal injection of glucose (1 g/kg body weight) into mice and blood glucoses were measured at 0, 15, 30, 60, and 90 min. ((c)–(f)) TG, TC, LDL-c and HDL-c concentrations in serum from fasted mice. Values are expressed as means ± S.E. (n = 7; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01 versus the HF group).
Figure 4Effects of CIE on hepatic lipid levels in HF diet-fed mice. (a) TG concentrations in liver; (b) TC concentrations in liver. Values are expressed as means ± S.E. (n = 7; *P < 0.05, versus the HF group).
Figure 5Effects of CIE on the relative mRNA expression in liver tissue. (a) PPARγ and its target genes. (b) LXR and its target genes. Beta-actin was used as an internal control. Values are expressed as means ± S.E. (n = 7; *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, versus the HF group).