Abstract

The administration of anti-obesity bioactive compounds and/or functional foods in rodents fed energy restriction diets based on chow food can be difficult to interpret. We propose an energy restricted cafeteria (CAF) diet as a dietetic intervention to be combined with other therapies. Postweaning male rats were fed standard chow, CAF diet or 30% energy restricted CAF diet (CAF-R) for 8 weeks. The CAF-R diet lowered energy intake and the increase of body weight and body mass index due to the CAF diet, lead to an intermediate feed efficiency, and dampened the CAF diet-induced alterations on body composition, serum levels of triacylglycerides and NEFAs, and insulin resistance. These effects were associated with diminished Ucp1, Nrf1 and Tfam1 gene expression in brown adipose tissue. In conclusion, the CAF-R diet ameliorated obesity and related metabolic disorders induced by a regular CAF diet, turning it in a useful tool to study anti-obesity compounds.

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