Abstract
Erythritol is both a common nonnutritive sweetener and an endogenous product of glucose metabolism. Recent reports suggest that elevated plasma erythritol is a predictive biomarker of cardiometabolic disease onset and complications. Although short-term erythritol consumption has been evaluated, the effect of chronically elevated circulating erythritol on adiposity and glucose metabolism has not. This study investigated the effect of longer-term erythritol consumption on weight gain and glucose tolerance in young/adolescent mice. Four erythritol supplementation experiments were completed and analyzed separately in male C57BL/6J mice. In experiments 1 and 2, mice aged 8 wk or 20 wk, respectively, were randomly allocated to consume 16% fat diet (LFD) or LFD with 40 g/kg erythritol. In experiments 3 and 4, mice aged 8 wk or 20 wk were fed 45% fat diet (HFD) or HFD with 40 g/kg erythritol (HFD+ERY). In each experiment, we compared the effect of erythritol consumption on plasma erythritol, body weight and composition, glucose tolerance, and brown adipose tissue (BAT) uncoupling protein 1 (UCP1) expression. We also investigated relative endogenous tissue erythritol concentrations in a subset of control (LFD or HFD) mice in experiments 1 and 3. There was no effect of erythritol supplementation on body weight or glucose tolerance in experiments 1-3. In experiment 4, in the 20-wk-old mice fed HFD or HFD+ERY, there was a significant interaction of time and erythritol on body weight (P <0.0001), but the main effect of diet was not significant. Plasma erythritol was elevated 40-fold in mice consuming erythritol-supplemented diets relative to mice consuming LFD or HFD controls. We found no effect of chronic erythritol consumption on BAT UCP1 protein concentrations. Liver and kidney tissue contained significantly higher endogenous erythritol than quadriceps and visceral adipose (P <0.001) in young mice fed LFD and HFD. In young/adolescent mice, prolonged erythritol consumption did not significantly affect body weight, composition, or glucose tolerance.
Published Version
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