Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Antioxidants may stop fat cells formation, says study

12/11/2007 - Natural antioxidant compounds like flavonoids and phenolic acids could inhibit the formation of fat formation from fat cells, suggests new research from Taiwan.A study of 15 phenolic acids and six flavonoids were studied for their ability to affect fat cells in laboratory cultures of mouse cells, with o-coumaric acid and rutin reported to inhibit activity of the glycerol-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) enzyme that forms triglycerides - fatty materials which at high levels increase the risk of heart disease."These results indicate that flavonoids and phenolic acids may play a role in the control of adipogenesis and they might have further implication in in vivo anti-obesity effects," wrote Chin-Lin Hsu and Gow-Chin Yen from National Chung Hsing University.According to the International Obesity Task Force, an estimated 300 million adults worldwide are obese (body mass index over 30).Moreover, rising obesity is predicted to have a huge impact on public health services. A recent Foresight report predicted that the cost of the epidemic in Britain, in terms of health care provision and lost working hours, could reach £45bn a year by 2050.The new study, published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, looked at the effects of the flavonoids and phenolics on levels of triglyceride in the cells and GPDH activity in 3T3-L1 adipocytes (fat cells). The researchers chose the 3T3-L1 cell line because it has been used widely for several decades as a cell model for fat cell biology research.Among the 15 phenolic acids and six flavonoids tested o-coumaric acid and rutin were found to inhibit intracellular triglyceride the most, by 61 and 83 per cent, respectively.Moreover, the same two compounds were found to be the most potent inhibitors of GPDH, reducing activity by 54 and 67 per cent, respectively.These two compounds also inhibited the expression of peroxisome proliferators-activated receptor gamma (PPAR-gamma), a protein that plays a role in metabolic functions, and the hormone leptin.The compounds also up-regulated expression of adiponectin, a hormone that modulates a number of metabolic processes."Adipose tissue is now known to produce and secrete a PPAR-gamma, which [has a role] in the early stage of adipocyte differentiation," wrote the researchers. "Some studies have addressed the important role that PPAR-gamma plays in the regulation of insulin sensitivity and glucose homeostasis." "The present experiment indicated that o-coumaric acid and rutin treatment inhibited the expression of PPAR-gamma protein levels, which demonstrated that compounds inhibited adipogenesis by affecting the transcriptional factor cascade upstream of PPAR-gamma expression.