Navy Bean Supplementation In Established High-Fat Diet-Induced Obesity Attenuates The Severity Of The Obese Inflammatory Phenotype

NUTRIENTS(2021)

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摘要
Cooked common beans (Phaseolus vulgaris) improve intestinal health in lean mice and attenuate intestinal dysbiosis and inflammation when consumed concurrent with obesity development. We determined the effects of a high-fat (HF) bean supplemented diet in mice with established obesity (induced by 12 weeks of HF diet (60% fat as kcal)) compared to obese mice consuming a HF or low-fat (LF) weight loss control diet. Obese C57BL/6 male mice remained consuming HF for eight weeks or were randomly switched from HF to an isocaloric HF with 15.7% cooked navy bean powder diet (HF -> HFB) or LF (11% fat as kcal; HF -> LF) (n = 12/group). HF -> HFB improved the obese phenotype, including (i) fecal microbiome (increased Prevotella, Akkermansia muciniphila, and short-chain fatty acid levels), (ii) intestinal health (increased ZO-1, claudin-2, Muc2, Relm beta, and Reg3 gamma expression), and (iii) reduced adipose tissue (AT) inflammatory proteins (NF kappa Bp65, STAT3, IL-6, MCP-1, and MIP-1 alpha), versus HF (p < 0.05). Conversely, HF -> LF reduced body weight and circulating hormones (leptin, resistin, and PAI-1) versus HF and HF -> HFB (p < 0.05); however, AT inflammation and intestinal health markers were not improved to the same degree as HF -> HFB (p < 0.05). Despite remaining on a HF obesogenic diet, introducing beans in established obesity improved the obese phenotype (intestinal health and adipose inflammation) more substantially than weight loss alone.
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obesity, navy beans, caloric restriction, intestinal health, epithelial barrier, adipose tissue inflammation
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