| Literature DB >> 25621503 |
Alessandra Gambero1, Marcelo L Ribeiro2.
Abstract
The prevalence of obesity has increased worldwide over the past three decades. Global anti-obesity strategies focus on dietary and lifestyle modifications to slow the development of obesity. Research in the nutrition field has recently aroused considerable interest based on the potential of natural products to counteract obesity. Several studies have identified yerba maté (Ilex paraguariensis) as an excellent candidate. In this review, we evaluated the impact of yerba maté on obesity and obesity-related inflammation. Cellular studies demonstrate that yerba maté suppresses adipocyte differentiation and triglyceride accumulation and reduces inflammation. Animal studies show that yerba maté modulates signaling pathways that regulate adipogenesis, antioxidant, anti-inflammatory and insulin signaling responses. In summary, the data presented here showed that the use of yerba maté might be useful against obesity, improving the lipid parameters in humans and animal models. In addition, yerba maté modulates the expression of genes that are changed in the obese state and restores them to more normal levels of expression. In doing so, it addresses several of the abnormal and disease-causing factors associated with obesity. Protective and ameliorative effects on insulin resistance were also observed. Thus, as a general conclusion, it seems that yerba maté beverages and supplements might be helpful in the battle against obesity.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25621503 PMCID: PMC4344557 DOI: 10.3390/nu7020730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
In vivo effects of yerba maté on adipogenesis: human and animals studies.
| Study | Type of Study | Population | Test Compounds (Daily Dosage) | Duration of Intake | Main Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Andersen and Fogh, 2001 [ | Double-blind placebo-controlled parallel trial | Forty-seven healthy overweight (body mass index (BMI) range of 25.8 ± 30.4 kg/m2) volunteers. | Three tablets of YGD (112 mg yerba maté, 95 mg guarana and 36 mg damiana extract) before each main meal. | 10 days and 45 days and weight maintenance over 12 months | YGD significantly increased gastric emptying time of 58 ± 15 min compared to 38 ± 7.6 min after placebo; significantly increased body weight reductions over 10 days (0.8 ± 0.05 kg after YGD compared with 0.3 ± 0.03 kg after placebo) and over 45 days (5.1 ± 0.5 kg after YGD compared to 0.3 ± 0.08 kg after placebo); treatment with YGD resulted in weight maintenance (73 kg at the beginning and 72.5 kg at the end of 12 months). |
| De Morais | Single-blind controlled trial | One hundred and two volunteers ( | 330 mL, 3-times/day of green or roasted yerba maté infusions. | 40 days | Normolipidemic subject treated with yerba maté exhibited a significative reduction of 8.7% on LDL-cholesterol. Dyslipidemic individuals lowered LDL-cholesterol levels up to 8.6% and non-HDL cholesterol up to 6.5%. The apolipoprotein B level was reduced by 6.0%, and HDL-cholesterol was significantly increased by 4.4%. The yerba maté consumption by hypercholesterolemic individuals on statin therapy promoted an additional 13.1% reduction in LDL-C and increased HDL cholesterol by 6.2%. |
| Harrold | Double blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | Fifty-eight healthy women, aged 18–65, with a BMI between 18.5 and 29.9 kg/m2. | Three tablets of YGD (112 mg yerba maté, 95 mg guarana and 36 mg damiana extract) and inulin-based soluble fermentable fiber (SSF; 5 g in 100 mL water), 3 tablets of YGD and water (100 mL), SFF and placebo (3 tablets) or water and placebo 15 min before lunch. | 1 day | YGD and SFF significantly reduced food and energy intake (59.5 g, 16.3%; 112.4 kcal, 17.3%; and 31.9 g, 9.1%; 80 kcal, 11.7%, respectively) compared with conditions where they were absent. The lowest intake (gram and kcal) was observed in the YGD + SFF combination. In summary, YGD causes a robust short-term effect on caloric intake, an effect augmented by SFF. |
| Pang | Experimental | Sprague-Dawley rats fed with high-fat diet (3 groups, | High-fat diet (HFD) supplemented with maté ( | 8 weeks | Yerba maté extract significantly reduced the final body weight. It reversed the HFD-induced downregulation of the adipose tissue genes implicated in adipogenesis or thermogenesis. Significant decreases in the phospho-AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK)/AMPK protein ratio were also observed. |
| Arçari | Experimental | Swiss mice fed with high-fat diet (3 groups, | 1 g/kg of roasted yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 8 weeks | Yerba maté significantly inhibited the inflammation in adipose tissue induced by obesity, modulating several pro- and anti-inflammatory genes and reducing macrophage infiltration. |
| Martins | Experimental | Swiss mice fed with high-fat diet (4 groups, | 1 and 2 g/kg of roasted yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 8 weeks | Yerba maté extract significantly reduced the final body weight. A reduction of total serum cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol levels was observed. Serum triglycerides were also significantly reduced. Yerba maté significantly reduced lipid accumulation in the liver (decreased by ~30%). |
| Arçari | Experimental | Swiss mice fed with high-fat diet (3 groups, | 1 g/kg of roasted yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 8 weeks | Yerba maté significantly improved insulin resistance by restoring hepatic and muscle IRS-1 and AKT phosphorylation and by controlling adipose tissue inflammation associated with obesity. |
| Hussein | Experimental | Male Tsumura Suzuki obese diabetic (TSOD) mice (3 groups, | 100 mg/kg of an aqueous extract of yerba maté by oral route (once per day). | 7 weeks | Significantly ameliorated metabolic syndrome by improving peripheral insulin sensitivity and cellular glucose uptake and by modulating the level of circulating lipid metabolites and adiponectin. |
| Hussein | Experimental | DdY mice fed with high-fat diet. | Aqueous extract of maté by oral route (once per day). | 3 weeks | Administration of yerba maté induced significant increases in GLP-1 levels and leptin levels, generating anorexic effects by direct induction of satiety. |
| Kang | Experimental | C57BL/6J mice fed with high-fat diet (5 groups, | 0.5, 1 or 2 g/kg of aqueous extract of yerba maté by oral route (once per day). | 4 weeks | Yerba maté consumption significantly reduced the body weight, adiposity, adipocyte size and leptin release by adipose tissue. Maté-treated mice also presented a significant reduction in serum levels of triglycerides and cholesterol. |
| Pimentel | Experimental | Wistar rats fed with high-fat diet (3 groups, | From 100 to 200 mg/kg of yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 8 weeks | Yerba maté significantly inhibited hypothalamic inflammation induced by obesity trough reducing the phosphorylation of hypothalamic IKK and NFκBp65 expression and significantly increasing the protein levels of IκBα and adiponectin receptor-1. Inflammation associated with obesity in liver and muscle was also significantly controlled by yerba maté. |
| Arçari | Experimental | Swiss mice fed with high-fat diet (3 groups, | 1 g/kg of roasted yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 8 weeks | Significantly improved insulin resistance by restoring hepatic FOXO1 nuclear translocation and upregulating gene expression of |
| Arçari | Experimental | Swiss mice fed with high-fat diet (3 groups, | 1 g/kg of roasted yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 8 weeks | Yerba maté extract significantly reduced the final body weight. It downregulated the expression of genes that regulate adipogenesis and upregulated the expression of genes related to the inhibition of adipogenesis. |
| Borges | Experimental | Wistar rats fed a with high-fat diet (4 groups, | 1 g/kg of roasted yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 4 weeks | The consumption of yerba maté promoted weight loss, attenuated the detrimental effects of HFD on adiposity and insulin sensitivity and decreased the blood levels of inflammatory biomarkers. Concerning peritoneal macrophages, maté decreased the mRNA production of |
| Carmo | Experimental | Wistar rats fed a with high-fat diet (4 groups, | 1 g/kg of roasted yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day) | 4 weeks | Significantly reduced body weight, body adiposity and cholesterol levels. Maté consumption reduced IL-1α, IL-6 and TNF-α production by bone marrow cells. |
| Gao | Experimental | Sprague-Dawley rats fed with high-fat diet (5 groups, | 1 2 and 4% yerba maté extract. The animals had free access to bottles containing the prepared infusion as the only available liquid source. | 4 weeks | Yerba maté may regulate blood lipid and endothelial function in hyperlipidemia rats. The putative mechanism may include a reduction of endothelin and thromboxane A2 levels and an increase in nitric oxide and 6-keto-PGF1α levels in the blood, downregulating the expression of ICAM-1 (Intercellular Adhesion Molecule 1) protein and upregulating the expression of LDLR (LDL receptor) and SR-B1 (scavenger receptor class B member 1) genes, inhibiting the occurrence of atherosclerosis. |
| Lima | Experimental | Wistar rats primed by early weaning. | 1 g/kg of yerba maté extract by oral route (once per day). | 4 weeks | Yerba maté consumption significantly reduces body weight, adiposity and triglycerides levels in the blood. |
Figure 1In vivo and in vitro effects of yerba maté in adipogenesis.
In vitro effects of yerba maté on adipogenesis.
| Study | Type of Cell (Origin) | Assay Employed | Tested Compounds (Concentration) | Main Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Martins | None * | Determination of lipase activity inhibitory action against porcine and human lipases and the influence of several olive oil emulsifying reagents. | 0.5–5.0 mg/mL of roasted yerba maté. | Yerba maté significantly inhibited the enzyme activities in a dose-dependent way, and its inhibitory activity against both lipases reached a maximum at 3.0 mg/mL, corresponding to 9 mg of tea/g substrate. Kinetic results indicated that yerba maté competitively inhibited pancreatic lipase activity in a concentration-dependent manner with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration value of 1.5 mg yerba maté/mL (or 4.5 mg of yerba maté/g of substrate), whereas a drastic decrease in lipolytic activity (>80% that of the control) was observed in the presence of 3.0 mg yerba maté/mL. |
| Gosmann | 3T3-L1 ( | Determination of phenolic compounds (Folin-Ciocalteu method), Oil Red O staining and gene expression. | Extracts of both fresh and dried maté leaves subjected to chromatography in order to obtain the saponin (20% yield) and the polyphenol extracts (40% yield). | Among the yerba maté samples, the polyphenol extract of fresh leaves exhibited a higher content of total phenols, followed by the polyphenol extract and the ethanol extract of dried leaves. Saponin extracts of both fresh and dried leaves exhibited lower contents of phenolic compounds. Regarding adipogenesis, the highest anti-adipogenic effect was detected in the polyphenol extract of dried leaves at 50 μg/mL, followed by the saponin extract of fresh leaves at 100 μg/mL and by the polyphenol extract of fresh leaves at 500 μg/mL. All assayed samples restrained the expression of the |
| Arcari | 3T3-L1 ( | Oil Red O staining and gene expression (Mouse Adipogenesis RT2 Profiler™ PCR Array). | 50, 250 or 500 µg/mL of roasted yerba maté, chlorogenic acid, quercetin, and rutin (Sigma-Aldrich). | Yerba maté extract and chlorogenic acid inhibited adipogenesis at a concentration of 50 µg/mL. Quercetin and rutin had inhibitory activity at the highest concentration. The PCR array revealed that yerba maté modulated the expression of 14 genes (belonging to PPARγ and WNT signaling pathways) that are associated with adipogenesis. In addition, the bioactive compounds also modulated the expression of adipogenesis-associated genes. However, fewer genes were regulated by chlorogenic acid, quercetin and rutin than by yerba maté. The authors claim that the synergism between these compounds might be responsible for the results observed. |
* Pancreatic lipase activity was based on the amount of free fatty acids liberated from emulsified olive oil (using human and porcine lipases that were commercially available).
Figure 2Proposed mechanism of action of yerba maté on the modulation of the PI3K-AKT signaling pathway.