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Brown seaweed Sargassum siliquosum as an intervention for diet-induced obesity in male wistar rats

journal contribution
posted on 2022-02-14, 04:13 authored by Ryan du PreezRyan du Preez, Marie Magnusson, Marwan E Majzoub, Torsten Thomas, Christina Praeger, Christopher RK Glasson, Sunil K Panchal, Lindsay Brown
The therapeutic potential of Sargassum siliquosum grown in Australian tropical waters was tested in a rat model of metabolic syndrome. Forty-eight male Wistar rats were divided into four groups of 12 rats and each group was fed a different diet for 16 weeks: corn starch diet (C); high-carbohydrate, high-fat diet (H) containing fructose, sucrose, saturated and trans fats; and C or H diets with 5% S. siliquosum mixed into the food from weeks 9 to 16 (CS and HS). Obesity, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, impaired glucose tolerance, fatty liver and left ventricular fibrosis developed in H rats. In HS rats, S. siliquosum decreased body weight (H, 547 ± 14; HS, 490 ± 16 g), fat mass (H, 248 ± 27; HS, 193 ± 19 g), abdominal fat deposition and liver fat vacuole size but did not reverse cardiovascular and liver effects. H rats showed marked changes in gut microbiota compared to C rats, while S. siliquosum supplementation increased gut microbiota belonging to the family Muribaculaceae. This selective increase in gut microbiota likely complements the prebiotic actions of the alginates. Thus, S. siliquosum may be a useful dietary additive to decrease abdominal and liver fat deposition

Funding

Category 3 - Industry and Other Research Income

History

Volume

13

Issue

6

Start Page

1

End Page

18

Number of Pages

18

eISSN

2072-6643

ISSN

2072-6643

Location

Switzerland

Publisher

MDPI

Publisher License

CC BY

Additional Rights

CC BY 4.0

Language

en

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2021-05-19

External Author Affiliations

University of Waikato, NZ; University of Southern Queensland; University of New South Wales; James Cook University

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Electronic

Journal

Nutrients

Article Number

1754