| Literature DB >> 26388708 |
Tatiana Ederich Lehnen1, Marcondes Ramos da Silva2, Augusto Camacho3, Aline Marcadenti4, Alexandre Machado Lehnen3.
Abstract
Conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) is highly found in fats from ruminants and it appears to favorably modify the body composition and cardiometabolic risk factors. The capacity of CLA to reduce the body fat levels as well as its benefic actions on glycemic profile, atherosclerosis and cancer has already been proved in experimental models. Furthermore, CLA supplementation may modulate the immune function, help re-synthetize of glycogen and potentiate the bone mineralization. CLA supplementation also could increase the lipolysis and reduce the accumulation of fatty acids on the adipose tissue; the putative mechanisms involved may be its action in reducing the lipase lipoprotein activity and to increase the carnitine-palmitoil-transferase-1 (CAT-1) activity, its interaction with PPARγ, and to raise the expression of UCP-1. Although studies made in human have shown some benefits of CLA supplementation as the weight loss, the results are still discordant. Moreover, some have shown adverse effects, such as negative effects on glucose metabolism and lipid profile. The purpose of this article is to review the available data regarding the benefits of CLA on the energetic metabolism and body composition, emphasizing action mechanisms.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26388708 PMCID: PMC4574006 DOI: 10.1186/s12970-015-0097-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Int Soc Sports Nutr ISSN: 1550-2783 Impact factor: 5.150
Fig. 1Isomer structure. (1) represents CLA 10-trans and 12-cis; (2) indicate CLA 9-cis and 11-trans; (3) C18:2 9-cis and 12-cis
Fig. 2Mechanism for transcriptional activation by PPAR. Panel a shows the inactivated state, without gene transcriptional of any target genes. Panel b shows the activation of PPAR by PPAR ligands and RXR by 9-cis-RA (9-cis-retinoic acid), thereby stimulating target genes transcription by binding to specific DNA sequence (peroxisome proliferators – PPRE) leading to increased β-oxidation, mitochondrial biogenesis and insulin sensitivity
Randomized clinical trials using CLA as intervention on putative benefits
| Author | Sampling | Study design | Intervention | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| BACHMAIR et al., 2015 [ | Forty-three healthy adults at low to moderate risk of cardiovascular disease | Double-blind, placebo controlled study | Sample received 4 g/day of CLA80:20 or placebo for two weeks | No clear evidence was found for inhibition or activation of platelet function as well as inflammation by CLA80:20 in a low to moderate cardiovascular risk group. |
| JENKINS et al., 2014a [ | Thirty-four untrained to moderately trained men | Double-blind, placebo controlled study | Randomly assigned to either a CLA (Clarinol A-80; | Serum triacylglycerol concentrations were lower (p < 0.05) in the CLA than the PLA group. For VO2peak and glucose, there were group × time interactions (p < 0.05). However, post-hoc statistical tests did not reveal any differences between the CLA and PLA groups. |
| JENKINS et al., 2014b [ | Thirty-four untrained to moderately trained men | Double-blind, placebo controlled study | Randomly assigned to either a CLA (Clarinol A-80; | There were no differences between the CLA and PLA groups for the analysis of covariance-adjusted post-test mean values for physical working capacity, sit-ups, or standing long jump. The physical working capacity increased from pre- to post-training in the CLA ( |
| ARYAEIAN et al., 2014 [ | Seventy eight adults with active rheumatoid arthritis | Double-blind clinical trial | Four groups receiving one of the following daily supplement for 3 months; group C: 2.5 g CLAs, group E: 400 mg Vitamin E, group CE: CLAs plus Vitamin E, group P: Placebo. Cytokines, matrix metalloproteinase (MMP-3) and citrullinated antibody (CCP-A) | Co-supplementation CLAs and Vitamin E may be effective in the level of inflammatory markers in rheumatoid arthritis patients. |
| EFTEKHARI et al., 2014 [ | Ninety atherosclerotic patients | clinical randomized trial | Patients were classified into 3 groups receiving 3 g/d CLA or 1 920 mg/d ω3 or placebo for 2 months. | Although CLA did not appear to have a significant effect on triglycerides, ω3 supplementation significantly reduced triglycerides level. Consumption of CLA and ω3 supplementation did not significantly affect HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, and total cholesterol. |
| MOHAMMADZADEH et al., 2013 [ | Thirty four volunteers patients with rectal cancer | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot | CLA group ( | CLA supplementation improved inflammatory factors, MMP-2, and MMP-9 as biomarkers of angiogenesis and tumor invasion. It seems that CLA may provide new complementary treatment by reducing tumor invasion and resistance to cancer treatment in patients with rectal cancer. |
| PENETO et al., 2013 [ | Twenty nine healthy adult volunteers (nineteen women and ten men, aged twenty two to thirty six years) | Double-blind clinical trial | CLA depletion was achieved through an 8-week period of restricted dairy fat intake (depletion phase; CLA intake was 5.2 ± 5.8 mg/day), followed by an 8-week period in which individuals consumed 20 g/day of butter naturally enriched with 9- | The intake of a 9- |
| CARVALHO et al., 2013 [ | Fourteen women diagnosed with metabolic syndrome | Randomized clinical trial, placebo-controlled | Participants received strawberry jam enriched or not with microencapsulated CLA (3 g/day) as a mixture of 38.57 % 9- | There were no significant effects of CLA on the lipid profile or blood pressure. Mean plasma insulin concentrations were significantly lower in women supplemented with CLA, did not alter the waist circumference, but there was a reduction in body fat mass detected after 30 days, and had a reduced waist circumference |
| BULUT et al., 2013 [ | Eighteen sedentary male volunteers | Randomized double blind experiment | Volunteers were randomly divided into CLA and placebo supplementation groups; both groups underwent daily supplementation of either 3 g CLA or 3 g placebo for 30 days and performed exercise on a bicycle ergometer 3 times per week | CLA is not more effective than exercise alone. |
| LÓPEZ PLAZA, et al., 2013 [ | Thirty eight volunteers (29w, 9 m) | A prospective, placebo-controlled, randomised double-blind, parallel clinical trial | Volunteers consumed 200 ml/day of skimmed milk with 3 g of CLAs or 3 g olive oil (placebo). | The consumption of skimmed milk enriched with 3 g of a 1:1 mixture of 9- |
| ENGBERIN et al. 2012 [ | Sixty-one healthy volunteers | Double-blind, placebo controlled study | The diets were identical except for 7 % of energy (18.9 g in a diet of 10 MJ/day) that was provided either by oleic acid, by industrial trans fatty acids or by 9- | The effect of the CLA diet compared with the oleic acid diet was 0.11 mm Hg (95 % confidence interval: −1.27, 1.49) systolic and −0.45 mm Hg (−1.63, 0.73) diastolic. Short-term high intakes of 9- |
| JOSEPH et al., 2011 [ | Twenty seven volunteers with overweight, borderline hypercholesterolemic, | Double-blinded, 3-phase crossover trial | Participants consumed under supervision in random order 3.5 g/d of safflower oil (control), a 50:50 mixture of 10- | Compared with the control treatment, the CLA treatments did not affect changes in body weight, body composition, or blood lipids. In addition, CLA did not affect the β-oxidation rate of fatty acids or induce significant alterations in the safety markers tested. |
| MICHISHITA et al., 2010 [ | Forty-one healthy subjects | Single-centre, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Subjects were randomized to receive either placebo or one of three test supplements: amino acid mixture 0.76 g/day; amino acid mixture 1.52 g/day; or amino acid mixture 1.52 g/day coadministered with conjugated linoleic acid 1.6 g/day and exercises for a period of 12 weeks | The results suggest that ingestion of these supplements might enhance the fat-burning effects of exercise. |
| WANDERS et al., 2010 [ | Sixty-one healthy women and men | Double-blind, placebo controlled study | It was provided either by oleic acid, by industrial trans fatty acids or by a mixture of 80 % 9- | High intakes of an 80:20 mixture of 9- |
| SLUIJS et al., 2010 [ | Four hundred and one | Double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled and parallel-group trial | Subjects receive either 4 g CLA/d (2.5 g 9- | There was no effect of 9- |
| SYVERTSEN et al., 2007 [ | One hundred and eighteen volunteers | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial | Supplementation with either placebo (olive oil) or CLA (Clarinol) for 6 months | CLA does not affect glucose metabolism or insulin sensitivity in a population of overweight or obese volunteers. |