| Literature DB >> 26184295 |
Roselene Ferreira Oliveira1, Geferson Almeida Gonçalves2, Fabíola Dorneles Inácio3, Eloá Angélica Koehnlein4, Cristina Giatti Marques de Souza5, Adelar Bracht6, Rosane Marina Peralta6.
Abstract
The purpose of the present work was to characterize the possible inhibition of pancreatic lipase by a tannin-rich extract obtained from the pinhão (Araucaria angustifolia seed) coat, based on the previous observation that this preparation inhibits α-amylases. Kinetic measurements of pancreatic lipase revealed that the pinhão coat tannin is an effective inhibitor. Inhibition was of the parabolic non-competitive type. The inhibition constants, Ki1 and Ki2, were equal to 332.7 ± 146.1 μg/mL and 321.2 ± 93.0 μg/mL, respectively, corresponding roughly to the inhibitor concentration producing 50% inhibition ([I]50). Consistently, the pinhão coat extract was also effective at diminishing the plasma triglyceride levels in mice after an olive oil load; 50% diminution of the area under the plasma concentration versus the time curve occurred at a dose of 250 mg/kg. This observation is most probably the consequence of an indirect inhibition of triglyceride absorption via inhibition of pancreatic lipase. For the pinhão coat tannin, this is the second report of a biological activity, the first one being a similar inhibition of the absorption of glucose derived from starch as a consequence of an inhibitory action on α-amylases. Taken together, these effects represent a potential anti-obesity action, as suggested for other polyphenol or tannin-rich preparations.Entities:
Keywords: enzyme; lipase; obesity; tannins
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26184295 PMCID: PMC4517019 DOI: 10.3390/nu7075242
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Inhibition of pancreatic lipase by pinhão coat extract and A. mearnsii tannin: concentration dependences. Initial reaction rates were measured as described in the Experimental Section. Each datum point represents the mean of three independent determinations: (A) relative reaction rates (v); (B) inverse reaction rates (1/v). The continuous lines in (B) represent the regression curves that were calculated after parabolic (A) and linear (B) regression analysis. The optimized equation for the pinhão coat extract was: y = 0.989 + 0.00141·x + 0.00000567·x2 (r = 0.992); for the A. mearnsii tannin: y = 0.982 + 0.00119·x (r = 0.981).
Figure 2Substrate and inhibitor concentration dependences of the reaction rates of pancreatic lipase. Initial reaction rates, measured as described in the Experimental Section, were represented against the substrate concentration. The pinhão coat extract concentration in the assay medium is given on each curve. Each datum point represents the mean of at least three measurements. The error parameters are mean standard errors, which are not visible when smaller than the symbol size. The continuous lines represent the theoretical curves calculated according to Equation (3) with the optimized parameters listed in Table 1.
Kinetic parameters of porcine pancreatic lipase obtained by fitting Equations (2) and (3) to the experimental data. Both equations were fitted simultaneously to the four substrate saturation curves obtained with the different pinhão coat extract concentrations shown in Figure 2. A non-linear least-squares procedure was used. The error terms correspond to standard deviations of the optimized parameters. The model selection criterion was 4.448, the correlation coefficient 0.995 and the sum of squared deviations 0.0541.
| Parameters | Optimized Values | |
|---|---|---|
| Equation (2) | Equation (3) | |
| KM (mM) | 0.0583 ± 0.0077 | 0.0581 ± 0.0068 |
| Vmax (μmol·min−1) | 2.094 ± 0.126 | 2.079 ± 0.112 |
| KiS (mM) | 1.401 ± 0.337 | 1.418 ± 0.311 |
| Ki1 (μg·mL−1) | 97,620 ± 15,080,211 | — |
| 1.090 ± 168.991 | — | |
| Ki2 (μg·mL−1) | 1604.5 ± 1887.5 | — |
| 82.19 ± 121.9 | — | |
| — | 332.7 ± 146.1 | |
| — | 321.2 ± 93.0 | |
| Sum of squared deviations | 0.0614 | 0.0541 |
| Model selection criterion | 4.210 | 4.448 |
Figure 3Blood triglyceride concentration profiles after intragastric olive oil loads in mice: the effect of the pinhão coat extract. The oral administration of olive oil was done immediately after the oral administration of three different doses of the pinhão coat extract. The doses that were administered are given on the graphs. Plasma triglycerides were measured as described in the Experimental Section. Each value represents the mean ± SD of three mice.
Figure 4Dependence of the area under the plasma triglyceride concentration versus time on the administered pinhão coat extract dose. The areas were obtained from the results shown in Figure 3. Each value represents the mean ± SD of three mice. Asterisks indicate statistical significance relative to the control (p ≤ 0.05 according to the Student–Newman–Keuls test).
Figure 5Blood triglyceride concentration profiles after intragastric olive oil loads in mice: The effects of orlistat and A. mearnsii tannin. The oral administration of olive oil was done immediately after the oral administration of orlistat and A. mearnsii tannin.The doses that were administered are given in the graphs. Plasma triglycerides were measured as described in the Experimental Section. Each value represents the mean ± SD of three mice.