| Literature DB >> 33348685 |
Maximilien Franck1,2, Juan de Toro-Martín1, Véronique Garneau1, Valérie Guay1, Michèle Kearney1, Geneviève Pilon1,3, Denis Roy1, Patrick Couture1,4, Charles Couillard1,2, André Marette1,3, Marie-Claude Vohl1,2.
Abstract
Consumption of red raspberries has been reported to exert acute beneficial effects on postprandial glycemia, insulinemia, triglyceridemia, and cytokine levels in metabolically disturbed subjects. In a two-arm parallel-group, randomized, controlled trial, 59 subjects with overweight or abdominal obesity and with slight hyperinsulinemia or hypertriglyceridemia were randomized to consume 280 g/day of frozen raspberries or to maintain their usual diet for 8 weeks. Primary analyses measured metabolic differences between the groups. Secondary analyses performed with omics tools in the intervention group assessed blood gene expression and plasma metabolomic changes following the raspberry supplementation. The intervention did not significantly affect plasma insulin, glucose, inflammatory marker concentrations, nor blood pressure. Following the supplementation, 43 genes were differentially expressed, and several functional pathways were enriched, a major portion of which were involved in the regulation of cytotoxicity, immune cell trafficking, protein signal transduction, and interleukin production. In addition, 10 serum metabolites were found significantly altered, among which β-alanine, trimethylamine N-oxide, and bioactive lipids. Although the supplementation had no meaningful metabolic effects, these results highlight the impact of a diet rich in raspberry on the immune function and phospholipid metabolism, thus providing novel insights into potential immune-metabolic pathways influenced by regular raspberry consumption.Entities:
Keywords: berry fruits; gene expression; immunity; metabolic syndrome; multi-omics; phenolic compounds; sphingolipids
Year: 2020 PMID: 33348685 DOI: 10.3390/nu12123858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717