| Literature DB >> 30400600 |
Abstract
Obesity is a group of metabolic disorders caused by multiple factors, including heredity, diet, lifestyle, societal determinants, environment, and infectious agents, which can all lead to the enhancement of storage body fat. Excess visceral fat mass in adipose tissue generate several metabolic disorders, including cardiovascular diseases with chronic inflammation based pathophysiology. The objective of the current review is to summarize the cellular mechanisms of obesity that attenuate by antioxidant potentials of medicinal and edible mushrooms. Studies have showed that mushrooms potentially have antioxidant capacities, which increase the antioxidant defense systems in cells. They boost anti-inflammatory actions and thereby protect against obesity-related hypertension and dyslipidemia. The practice of regular consumption of mushrooms is effective in the treatment of metabolic syndrome, including obesity, and thus could be a good candidate for use in future pharmaceutical or nutraceutical applications.Entities:
Keywords: anti-inflammatory; anti-obesity; antioxidants; cholesterol-lowering effects; medicinal and edible mushrooms
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30400600 PMCID: PMC6278646 DOI: 10.3390/molecules23112880
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Pathophysiology of obesity and energy homeostasis—Melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) is a peptide hormone, synthesized by the neurons of the hypothalamus, which normally stimulate food intake. These neurons are arbitrated by POMC as well as NPY/AGRP in an arcuate nucleus. Leptin and insulin are peptide hormones that activate POMC while inhibiting NPY/AGRP, consequently reduces body weight through energy expenditure or lipolysis and release free fatty acids (FFA). In contrast, the hunger hormone, ghrelin provokes NPY/AGRP and enhances body weight through the intake of food. MCH neurons are impeded by POMC cells, however, NPY/AGRP neurons are known to have an antagonist effect. Weight loss reduces insulin and leptin amounts in the blood while increasing ghrelin levels. This response is regulated by the arcuate nucleus (triggering of NPY/AGRP and impeding of POMC) that ultimately activates MCH neurons.
Figure 2Physiological disorders related to obesity and its impact on human health. Endometrial cancer: Obesity elevates the threat of endometrial cancer via endocrine pathways. Elevated adiposity provokes aromatase action, leading to augmented estrogen in postmenopausal women. Estrogens generally elevate endometrial cell propagation and stimulating the production of IGF-binding protein 1 (IGF1)-cause endometrial cancer. Tumor development: Adipocyte normally synthesizes aromatase and 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17β-HSD). In obese persons, there is elevated transformation of the androgens Δ4-androstenedione (Δ4A) and testosterone (T) into the estrogens, oestrone (E1) and oestradiol (E2), respectively, by an enzyme, aromatase. 17β-HSD catalyze the Δ4A and E1 (less biologically active hormones) into the T and E2 (more active hormones), respectively. The circulating levels of sex-hormone-binding globulin aids to elevate the amounts of E2 and T that can readily diffuse across to target cells through binding with estrogen and androgen receptors. Ultimately, they inhibit apoptosis and promote cellular proliferation in the breast epithelium and endometrium. Diabetes: obesity leads to hyperinsulinemia and diabetes, which in turn produce AGE cause pro-inflammatory state by NF-χB, protein kinase, and intracellular adhesion molecules. Based on the reduction of NO and more leucocytes infiltration on the vessels cause endothelial and microvascular dysfunction, which influenced by oxidative stress (ROS), eventually cause atherosclerosis and hypertension. Carbohydrate and lipid metabolism: Excess glucose and fatty acid oxidation leads to lipid peroxidation, which facilitates lipoprotein toxicity and enhances the rate of hypertension in the blood vessels.
In vitro and in vivo actions of edible and medicinal mushrooms and their anti-obesity potential.
| Edible/Medicinal Mushroom | Botanical Name | Study Model/Methods | Bioactive Compounds | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Edible |
| Hypercholesterolemic diet and STZ induced rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, ALT, AST and LDL | Vitamin C, D, B12, folates, and polyphenols | [ |
| Edible |
| High-fat diet in rats-serum cholesterol and hepatic LDL receptor mRNA | Fibers | [ |
| Hypertensive rats-Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme assay | Oligopeptide | [ | ||
| Edible |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, glycated hemoglobin, TBARS | Polyphenols and flavonoids | [ |
| Hypertensive rats-Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme assay | Oligopeptide | [ | ||
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| STZ induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, total TC, TG | Heteropolysaccharide | [ |
| Edible |
| STZ induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, total TC, TG | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Edible |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-SOD, GSH-Px, CAT, MDA, ALT, AST, BUN, CRE, TC, LDL-C and HDL-C | Polysaccharides | [ |
| In vitro-DPPH free radical & Hydroxy radical scavenging, in vitro α-glycosidase, aldose reductase inhibitory assays | Polysaccharides | [ | ||
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ | ||
| Edible |
| C57BL/6J mice model-serum and hepatic TG levels | Flavonoids | [ |
| Hyperlipidemic rats-plasma total cholesterol, LDL, HDL, cholesterol, triglyceride, phospholipid, atherogenic index, and hepatic HMG-CoA reductase | Exo-polymer | [ | ||
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, glycated hemoglobin, glycated serum protein, and AGE, SOD, CAT, GSH levels | Polyphenols and flavonoids | [ |
| Edible |
| High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, LDL, cholesterol 7-α-hydroxylase 1 | Lentinan KS-2 | [ |
| High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, LDL, total lipids, phospholipids, LDL/HDL ratio, BIL, CRE, Urea, BUN, Uric acid, Total protein, Na, Ca, Cl, K, albumin, P, Mg | Lentinan KS-2 | [ | ||
| High-fat diet in rabbits-TC, histological, immunohistochemical and morphometrically analysis | Lentinan KS-2 | [ | ||
| High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, ALT, AST, Urea, glucose, malondialdehyde | Lentinan KS-2 | [ | ||
| Edible |
| High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, LDL, total lipids, phospholipids, LDL/HDL ratio, BIL, CRE, Urea, BUN, Uric acid, Total protein, Na, Ca, Cl, K, albumin, P, Mg | Lentinan KS-2, flavonoids | [ |
| Edible |
| in vitro enzymatic starch digestion assay | Polyphenols and flavonoids | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| mice hyperlipidemic models-blood lipid levels (TC, TG, HDL-C, LDL-C, and VLDL-C), liver lipid levels (TC and TG) and antioxidant status (SOD, T-AOC, MDA, and LPO) | Mycelia zinc polysaccharide | [ |
| Edible |
| Diabetic mice-Inhibition of the proliferation of hepatoma HepG2 cells and breast cancer MCF7 cells, antioxidant activity in erythrocyte hemolysis, blood glucose and TG | Polysaccharide-peptide complex LB-1b | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-SOD, GSH-Px, CAT, MDA, ALT, AST, BUN, CRE, TC, LDL-C and HDL-C | Mycelium zinc polysaccharides | [ |
| Edible |
| High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, LDL, total lipids, phospholipids, LDL/HDL ratio, BIL, CRE, Urea, BUN, Uric acid, Total protein, Na, Ca, Cl, K, albumin, P, Mg | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Edible |
| High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, LDL, total lipids, phospholipids, LDL/HDL ratio, BIL, CRE, Urea, BUN, Uric acid, Total protein, Na, Ca, Cl, K, albumin, P, Mg | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Edible |
| High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, LDL, total lipids, phospholipids, LDL/HDL ratio, BIL, CRE, Urea, BUN, Uric acid, Total protein, Na, Ca, Cl, K, albumin, P, Mg | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-Angiotensin I-Converting Enzyme assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible | High-fat diet in rats-TG, TC, LDL, total lipids, phospholipids, LDL/HDL ratio, BIL, CRE, Urea, BUN, Uric acid, Total protein, Na, Ca, Cl, K, albumin, P, Mg | Polysaccharides | [ | |
| Edible |
| Ob diabetic rats-TC, TG, LDL, HDL, and PPAR-α mRNA expression | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| in vitro α-glycosidase, aldose reductase inhibitory assays, DPPH free radical scavenging | Polyphenols and flavonoids | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| Hypertensive rats-ACE assay | Oligopeptide | [ |
| Edible |
| TC content in serum, lipoproteins in the liver, and HMG-CoA reductase in liver microsomes | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Inhibition of HMG CoA reductase-lovastatin | Polysaccharides | [ | ||
| Edible | High cholesterol diet fed Wistar rats-Pancreatic triacylglycerol lipase and α-amylase/α-glucosidase, OGTT, TC, TG | Polyphenols | [ | |
| Edible | High-fat diet fed Wistar rats-body weight gain, visceral fat pad weights, serum lipid levels, as well as hepatic lipid levels, numbers of lipid droplets, expression of fat intake-related gene ACC2 and lipogenesis-related genes (e.g., SREBP-1c, ACC1, FAS, SCD1, GPATR, AGPAT, and DGAT), fatty acid oxidation and thermogenesis-related genes (e.g., PPAR-α, ACO, CPT1, UCP2, and UCP3), phosphorylated AMPKα, phosphorylated ACC | Polysaccharides | [ | |
| Edible |
| The high-fat diet fed Wistar rats-TC, TG, HDL-C, LDL-C, levels in the serum and liver, atherogenic index | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Edible and Medicinal | ACE Inhibitory Assay | Polyphenol | [ | |
| Medicinal |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, ALT, AST | exo-biopolymers | [ |
| Medicinal |
| High-fat diet in mice-phospholipids, liver enzymes, TG, glycerol, glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase | Phenolic compound | [ |
| Medicinal |
| STZ induced animal model-plasma glucose, total TC, TG, ALT, AST | Exo-polymer | [ |
| Medicinal |
| In vitro-Superoxide anion, DPPH free radical & Hydroxy radical scavenging, In vitro-HMG-CoA reductase and α-glucosidase | Polysaccharides | [ |
| mice hyperlipidemic models-blood lipid levels (TC, TG, HDL-C, LDL-C, and VLDL-C), liver lipid levels (TC and TG) and antioxidant status (SOD, T-AOC, MDA, and LPO) | Polysaccharides | [ | ||
| Medicinal |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, ALT, AST | exo-biopolymers | [ |
| Medicinal |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, ALT, AST | exo-biopolymers | [ |
| Medicinal |
| High-fat diet in rats-TC, LDL, body weight, food intake, liver weight, cecum weight, cecum pH, Cecal acetic acid, butyric acid, and total SCFA | Fibers | [ |
| High-fat diet in male hamsters-TG, TC, LDL, total lipids, phospholipids, LDL/HDL ratio | Dietary fiber, polysaccharide, and mycosterol, | [ | ||
| Medicinal |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, ALT, AST | Exo-biopolymers | [ |
| Medicinal |
| In vitro-HMG-CoA reductase and α-glucosidase | Lanostane (Triterpenes) | [ |
| Medicinal |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TC, TG, glycated hemoglobin, TBARS | Polysaccharides | [ |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, NO, SOD, CAT, GPx | Polysaccharides | [ | ||
| in vitro α-glycosidase, aldose reductase inhibitory assays, DPPH free radical scavenging | Polyphenols and flavonoids | [ | ||
| Medicinal |
| in vitro enzymatic starch digestion assay | Appanoxidic acid A | [ |
| Medicinal |
| High-fat diet in rats-TC, LDL, body weight, food intake, liver weight, cecum weight, cecum pH, Cecal acetic acid, butyric acid, and total short-chain fatty acid | Fiber | [ |
| Medicinal |
| STZ induced animal model-plasma glucose, total cholesterol, and triglyceride | Exo-polymer | [ |
| High-fat diet in rats-TC, LDL, body weight, food intake, liver weight, cecum weight, cecum pH, Cecal acetic acid, butyric acid, and total short-chain fatty acid | Fibers | [ | ||
| Medicinal |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, ALT, AST | exo-biopolymers | [ |
| Medicinal |
| STZ induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, TG, TC, ALT, AST | Heteropolysaccharides and two proteoglycans | [ |
| Medicinal |
| Alloxan-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, OGTT, TC, TG, SOD, CAT, GPx, and GSH | Polysaccharides | [ |
| STZ-induced diabetic rats-plasma glucose, lipid profile, ALT, AST, serum insulin, liver glycogen | Polysaccharides | [ | ||
| Medicinal |
| in vitro enzymatic starch digestion assay | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Medicinal |
| ob/ob mice-Plasma glucose, OGTT, TG | Exopolysaccarides | [ |
| In vitro-ABTS radical scavenging activity, DPPH radical scavenging activity, LDL oxidation; NO synthase expression in RAW 264.7 cells | Polyphenols and flavonoids | [ | ||
| Medicinal | STZ-induced diabetic rats-Plasma glucose, TC, TG | Exo-polymer | [ | |
| Medicinal |
| Serum total lipids and TC | Polysaccharides | [ |
| Medicinal | C57BL/6J mice fed on a high-fat diet-body weight, serum lipid, and liver enzymes, protein carbonyl and lipid hydroperoxide levels, enzymic antioxidants (SOD, CAT, and GPx) activities, Expression of hormone-sensitive lipase, adipose triglyceride lipase, peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma, sterol regulatory binding protein-1c, and lipoprotein lipase | β-glucan | [ |
Abbreviations: 17β-HSD: 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase; ACC1: acetyl-CoA carboxylase 1; ACE: angiotensin converting enzyme; ACO: 1-aminocyclopropane-1-carboxylate oxidase; AGE: advanced glycation end products; AGPAT: 1-acylglycerol-3-phosphate O-acyltransferase 1; AgRP: agouti-related peptide; ALT: alanine transaminase; AMPK: 5′ adenosine monophosphate-activated protein kinase; Ang-I: angiotensin I; Ang-II: angiotensin II; AST: aspartate transaminase; AT-1: angiotensin II type 1 receptor; BMI: body mass index; BMR: basal metabolic rate; BUN: blood urea nitrogen; Ca: calcium; CAT: catalase; Cl: chloride; CNS: central nervous system; CPT1: carnitine Palmitoyltransferase 1A; CRE: creatinine; CRP: c-reactive protein; CVD: cardiovascular diseases; DGAT: diacylglycerol O-Acyltransferase 1; DPPH: 2,2-diphenyl-1-picrylhydrazyl; E1: estrone; E2: estradiol; FFA: free fatty acids; GPATR: glycerol-3-phosphate acyltransferase; GSH: glutathione; GSH-Px: glutathione peroxidase; HDL: high density lipoprotein; HFD: high fat diet; HMG-CoA: β-hydroxy, β methyl glutaryl COA; ICAM: Intercellular Adhesion Molecule; IGF1: IGF binding protein 1; IL-1: interleukin 1; IL-6: interleukin 6; K: potassium; LDL: low density lipoprotein; LPO: lipid peroxidation; MAPK: mitogen-activated protein kinases; MCH: melanin concentrating hormone; MDA: melondialdehyde; Mg: magnesium; mRNA: messenger ribonucleic acids; Na: sodium; NF-χB: nuclear factor kappa B; NO: nitric oxide; NPY: neuropeptide Y; OGTT: oral glucose tolerance test; P: phosphorus; POMC: pro-opiomelanocortin; PPAR-α: peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor alpha; PUFA: poly unsaturated fatty acids; RAS: renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system; ROS: reactive oxygen species; SCD1: stearoyl-CoA desaturase 1; SCFA: short chain fatty acids; SCFA: short chain fatty acids; SOD: superoxide dismutase; SREBP-1c: sterol regulatory element-binding transcription factor 1; STZ: streptozotocin; T-AOC: total antioxidant capacity; TBARS: thiobarbituric acid reactive substances; TC: total cholesterol; TG: triglycerides; TNF-α: tumour necrosis factor-α; UCP2: mitochondrial uncoupling proteins 2; UCP3: mitochondrial uncoupling proteins 3; VCAM: vascular cell adhesion molecule; VLDL: very low density lipoprotein; Δ4A: Δ4-androstenedione.
Figure 3Antihypertensive effect of mushrooms—Mushrooms are found to be Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, which help to reduce hypertension by constraining ACE. This enzyme is accountable for transforming the inactive protein Ang I into the active Ang II. The renin-angiotensin system–angiotensin II has a multifaceted range of effects on the maintenance of blood pressure and this impact elevates sodium and water retention through the release of aldosterone.
Figure 4Effect of edible and medicinal mushrooms on dyslipidemia.