Wheat Alkylresorcinols Suppress High-Fat, High-Sucrose Diet-Induced Obesity and Glucose Intolerance by Increasing Insulin Sensitivity and Cholesterol Excretion in Male Mice

Feb 4, 2015The Journal of nutrition

Wheat compounds may reduce obesity and blood sugar problems from a high-fat, high-sugar diet by improving insulin use and cholesterol removal in male mice

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Abstract

Alkylresorcinols from wheat bran suppressed body weight increases by 31.0% in mice fed a high-fat, high-sucrose diet.

  • Alkylresorcinols reduced hepatic triglyceride accumulation in mice, with levels of 19.8 mg/g tissue compared to 29.6 mg/g in control.
  • The treatment decreased nighttime blood levels of insulin and leptin, showing reductions to 2.1 μg/L and 10.8 μg/L, respectively.
  • Fasting blood glucose concentrations were significantly lower in the alkylresorcinol group, measuring 160 mg/dL versus 190 mg/dL in controls.
  • Alkylresorcinols increased the phosphorylation of certain proteins involved in insulin signaling by up to 81.3%.
  • Fecal cholesterol excretion increased by 39.6%, while blood cholesterol levels decreased by 30.4% in treated mice.

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