| Literature DB >> 32033387 |
Nurul 'Izzah Ibrahim1, Syed Fairus2, Mohamed S Zulfarina1, Isa Naina Mohamed1.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death worldwide. Squalene (SQ), an intermediate for the cholesterol biosynthesis, has been proposed to act similarly to statins via inhibition of 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA) reductase in the liver.Entities:
Keywords: atherosclerosis; cardiovascular disease; cholesterol; hyperlipidemic; squalene
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32033387 PMCID: PMC7071298 DOI: 10.3390/nu12020414
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Figure 1Potential beneficial effects of squalene and the underlying mechanisms responsible for the effects [32,33]; 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl coenzyme A (HMG-CoA).
Figure 2Chemical structure of Squalene (SQ).
Figure 3Flow chart to show the selection process of the articles in this review.
Characteristics of animal studies related to hyperlipidemia included in the review.
| Study | Disease/ | Study Type / | Sample/ | Methodology | Results | Comments/Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | Male Syrian hamsters | The hamsters were fed with semi-synthetic diet containing 20% (w/w) of fat and a palm oil triacylglycerol (POTG) fraction isolated from commercial palm olein. They were divided into 4 groups: | Squalene supplemented in short-term period (45 days) at a low level (0.1%) reduced serum TC. | |
| Study 2 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | Male Sprague Dawley rats (110–130 g) | All rats were fed with 1% cholesterol diet for four weeks to induce hypercholesterolemia and were assigned into | AS injection to the rats caused significant( | Amaranth SQ (AS), which represents a plant source of SQ, exerts better hypolipidemic effects compared to the shark liver SQ (animal source of SQ). increased fecal elimination of steroids and different sources of SQ (plant vs animal) that might affect cholesterol metabolism. |
| Study 3 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | 40 male Wistar rats (22 days old) | The two groups were fed with the following diet for four weeks: control group received a diet without squalene and SQ group was provided with high squalene diet (1000 mg/kg orally). | Following SQ feeding, BP and body weight gain were lower in the SQ group. | Squalene may counteract the increase in body fat, BP, and levels of plasma leptin, glucose, cholesterol, and triglycerides. |
| Study 4 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | Male wild-type (WT), Apo E-deficient and Apoa1-deficient mice on C57BL/6J genetic background | All mice were fed chow semi-purified diets and divided into control groups:
WT mice, Apoa1-deficient mice, Apo E-deficient mice, SQ-treated animals:
WT mice received 1 g SQ/kg BW, Apoa1-deficient mice received 1 g SQ/kg BW, Apo E-deficient animals were given two different doses of SQ:
0.25 g SQ/kg BW, 1 g SQ/kg BW, | SQ supplemented at a high dose | |
| Study 5 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | Obese/diabetic model KK-Ay mice (male, four weeks age) | The groups were as follows: control fed with fat diet and test diet fed with fat diet contained 2% SQ. fatty acid profile and TG, cholesterol levels in serum, liver, and epididymal white adipose tissue (WAT). | There was a significant decrease in the liver and epididymal WAT TG of SQ fed experimental groups as compared to control ( | SQ influenced the lipid metabolism as seen by the TG levels and fatty acid profiles in the test diet fed to KK-Ay mice. |
| Study 6 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | Thirty-six male adult F1B hamsters | This study was divided into three phases: | Under this experimental condition, SQ supplementation at 1% of the total diet did not produce hypocholesterolemic and hypotriglyceridemic effects in the high-fat diet hamsters. | |
| Study 7 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | Thirty male Golden Syrian hamsters | Each group was fed with one of the following diets for 4 weeks: | Elevation in serum TC in all groups supplemented with SQ (groups 2 to 5) | The investigators had concluded that SQ exerts a hypercholesterolemic effect at least in hamsters. Thus, caution must be exercised when SQ is routinely consumed as supplements. |
| Study 8 | Hyperlipidemia | Animal study | Forty-six male Golden Syrian strain hamsters, weanling (approximately 21 days), of sanitary standard type | Following seven days of adaptation, the rats were fed with commercial diet. | There was a significant increase in all lipid profile parameters in the amaranth oil and SQ groups when compared to the control group ( | The consumption of amaranth oil and its SQ component did not exert a hypocholesterolemic effect in hamsters fed on a high-fat diet but promoted an increase in fecal excretion of bile acids. |
VLDL: very-low-density lipoproteins; HDL: high-density lipoprotein; ROS: reactive oxygen species; IDL: intermediate-density lipoproteins; Apoa1: apolipoprotein a-1;CVD: cardiovascular disease; DHA: docosahexaenoic acid; KK-Ay: a cross between diabetic kk and lethal yellow; BW: body weight; LDL-C: low-density lipoprotein cholesterols; HDL-C: high-density lipoproteins cholesterols; TAG: triacylglycerol; TC: total cholesterol; TG: triglyceride; AS: amaranth SQ; SS: shark liver SQ; F1B: bio F1B; ApoE: apolipoprotein E; Apoa4: apolipoprotein A4.
Characteristics of animal studies related to atherosclerosis included in the review.
| Study | Disease/ | Study Type/ | Sample/ | Methodology | Results | Comments/Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | Atherosclerosis | Animal study | Male rabbits | Rabbits were randomly divided into five groups as follows: | a) Atheromatous lesions: | Supplementation of SQ may be regarded as a source of endogenous cholesterol and did not cause atherosclerosis. |
| Study 2 | Atherosclerosis | Animal study | Homozygous ApoE knockout mice | Both groups (male and female) were fed on a standard chow diet and were assigned into two groups with different beverages: | One% SQ supplemented in beverage significantly decreased plasma cholesterol, triglycerides, and Apoa1 in females ( | The administration of SQ modulates lesion development in a sex-specific manner. |
Characteristics of animal studies related to myocardial infarction included in the review.
| Study | Disease/ | Study Type/ | Sample/ | Methodology | Results | Comments/Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | Myocardial infarction | Animal study | Wistar strain male albino rats (100–120 g) | Following 7-day acclimatization, the rats were divided according to groups, were fed on a standard diet with added oils for 45 days, and were injected with saline or isoproterenol for 2 days. Isoproterenol was used to induce myocardial infarction in rats. | The prior treatment with SQ had significantly increased the activities of antioxidant enzymes (GPx and GST) and anti-peroxidative enzymes (CAT and SOD) in the heart tissue of group IV as compared to group III isoproterenol-induced myocardial infarcted rats ( | SQ supplementation possesses a cardioprotective effect due to their antioxidant property. |
| Study 2 | Myocardial infarction | Animal study | Wistar male albino rats (100–120 g) | All rats were fed on a standard diet with added oils for 45 days and were injected with saline or isoproterenol for 2 days according to the groups. Isoproterenol was used to induce myocardial infarction in rats. | The pretreatment of 2% SQ in the diet had significantly reduced the release of diagnostic marker enzymes (ALT, AST, LDH, and CPK) into the systemic circulation as compared to group III rats ( | The cardioprotective effect of SQ might be contributed by the antioxidant property and membrane-stabilizing action. |
| Study 3 | Myocardial infarction | Animal study | Male Wistar strain albino rats | All animals were fed on a standard diet with added oils for 45 days and injected with saline/isoproterenol for 2 days according to the groups. Isoproterenol was used to induce myocardial infarction (MI) in rats. lipid parameters in plasma cholesterol, triglycerides, free fatty acids, phospholipids, LDL-C, and HDL-C; lipid parameters in heart tissue cholesterol, triglycerides, free fatty acids, and phospholipids; and lipid peroxides in plasma and heart tissue. | For normal rats (group I vs group II), SQ supplementation to the normal rats (group II) had significantly increased plasma HDL-C levels compared to the group I normal control rats ( | The pre-administration of 2% SQ for 45 days prevents the symptoms of isoprenaline-induced myocardial infarction in rats. hypolipidemic property and free-radical scavenging ability against isoprenaline-induced lipid peroxidation. |
| Study 4 | Myocardial infarction | Animal study | Twenty-four Wistar strain male albino rats (120–150 g) | All rats were fed on a standard diet with added oils for 45 days and were injected with saline or isoproterenol for 2 days according to the groups. Isoproterenol was used to induce myocardial infarction in rats. | The pretreatment of 2% SQ (group IV) had significantly decreased the level of protein, hexose, and hexosamine in both plasma and heart tissue ( | The pretreatment of SQ might exert cardioprotective effects by preventing isoprenaline-induced necrotic damage to the myocardial cell membrane by its membrane-stabilizing and antioxidant properties. |
| Study 5 Dhandapani et al. 2007 [ | Myocardial infarction | Animal study | Forty-eight Wistar strain male albino rats | The rats were fed on | Pre-supplementation with SQ alone (Group 2b) had significantly reduced the release of these enzymes (ALT, AST, LDH, and CPK) from the myocardium into the systemic circulation as compared to group 1b isoprenaline-administered rats ( | Supplementation of SQ significantly counteracts the isoprenaline-induced elevations in the levels of diagnostic marker enzymes and LPO and is able to maintain the level of antioxidant enzymes at near normalcy. |
| Study 6 | Myocardial infarction | Animal study | Male Wistar strain albino rats | All animals were fed on a standard diet with added oils for 45 days and injected with saline/isoproterenol for 2 days according to the groups. Isoproterenol was used to induce myocardial infarction in rats. | Prior administration of 2% SQ in the diet (group IV) significantly increased the endogenous antioxidants (vitamin C and vitamin E) compared to MI-control rats (group III) ( | SQ supplementation potentially exerts a deleterious effect of isoprenaline-induced aberration in endogenous antioxidant vitamins in experimental rats. |
Characteristics of animal studies related to cardiotoxicity and cardiomyopathy included in the review.
| Study | Disease/ | Study Type/ | Sample/ | Methodology | Results | Comments/Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | Cardiotoxicity | Animal study | Male Wistar albino rats | Group I acted as the vehicle-treated control. | SQ treatment caused normalization of the levels of NO and Ca+2, a significant increase in the activity of GPx ( | SQ was able to attenuate the pathological alterations in the heart of CP-induced cardiotoxicity. |
| Study 2 | Cardiomyopathy | Animal study | Male albino rats (180–200 g) | All rats received daily gavage according to the groups for three weeks. | SQ supplementation to the cardiomyopathy-induced group (group 5) significantly reduced the TC, LDL-C, TG, and free FA profiles in plasma ( | SQ supplementation at a low dose exerts a protective role against doxorubicin-induced cardiomyopathy in rats but did not revert them to the normal level. |
Characteristics of human studies included in the review.
| Study | Disease/Condition | Study Type/ | Sample/ | Methodology | Results | Comments/Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study 1 | Cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disorders with different degrees of hypercholesterolemia | Human study | Fifteen patients | The patients were divided into two groups: | Fecal analysis showed that approximately 60% of dietary squalene was absorbed. | SQ supplementation can increase cholesterol synthesis; however, no association was found with the consistency increment of serum cholesterol level. |
| Study 2 | Hypercholesterolemia | Human study | Eighteen male subjects | This study had four periods as follows: | The addition of 1 g SQ to the diet at week 15 showed a significant increase in total cholesterol when compared to rapeseed oil-consuming only at week 6 and control rapeseed oil at week 15 and week 21 ( | A long-term (9 weeks) and large-amount SQ intake (1 g/d) might cause increased total cholesterol in serum due to augmented number of LDL particles with low surface lipids (free cholesterol and phospholipids) |
| Study 3 | Hypercholesterolemia | Human study, double-blind, randomized, placebo- | One hundred and two elderly (age > 65) patients with primary hypercholesterole-mia | Prior to randomization, any previous treatment with lipid-lowering drugs was discontinued for two months and a single-blind placebo lead-in period of four weeks was administered along with the dietary treatment. | Supplementation of SQ 860 mg/day for 20 weeks had significantly decreased TC and LDL-C levels when compared to the baseline level and placebo group ( | Dietary squalene appeared to exert hypocholesterolemic activity. |