Abstract

To determine the metabolic effects of grapefruit juice consumption we established a model in which C57Bl/6 mice drank 25–50% sweetened GFJ, clarified of larger insoluble particles by centrifugation (cGFJ), ad libitum as their sole source of liquid or isocaloric and sweetened water. cGFJ and control groups consumed similar amounts of liquids and calories. Mice fed a high-fat diet and cGFJ experienced a 18.4% decrease in weight, a 13–17% decrease in fasting blood glucose, a three-fold decrease in fasting serum insulin, and a 38% decrease in liver triacylglycerol values, compared to controls. Mice fed a low-fat diet that drank cGFJ experienced a two-fold decrease in fasting insulin, but not the other outcomes observed with the high-fat diet. cGFJ consumption decreased blood glucose to a similar extent as the commonly used anti-diabetic drug metformin. Introduction of cGFJ after onset of diet-induced obesity also reduced weight and blood glucose. A bioactive compound in cGFJ, naringin, reduced blood glucose and improved insulin tolerance, but did not ameliorate weight gain. These data from a well-controlled animal study indicate that GFJ contains more than one health-promoting neutraceutical, and warrant further studies of GFJ effects in the context of obesity and/or the western diet.

Highlights

  • The unabated increase in incidence of obesity and obesityassociated disorders, type-2 diabetes, continues to present monumental challenges to health [1]

  • We report a model in which mice consumed centrifugation clarified Grapefruit juice (GFJ) ad libitum at rates comparable to liquid consumption of control groups. cGFJ consumption did not modify food intake or absorption

  • We developed a well-controlled animal model, which showed that regardless of the amount of fat in the diet, consumption of cGFJ markedly lowered fasting serum insulin

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Summary

Introduction

The unabated increase in incidence of obesity and obesityassociated disorders, type-2 diabetes, continues to present monumental challenges to health [1]. Putative health and weight-loss promoting effects of grapefruit or GFJ consumption have been popularized, but mostly in context of a hypocaloric diet, e.g. the ‘‘Hollywood diet’’, which limits caloric intake to as low as 3349 kJ per day. Few human studies have examined the effects of grapefruit or GFJ consumption per se on metabolism in well-controlled experiments, and these have produced intriguing, but contradictory results. Fujioka et al reported that consumption of GFJ, whole grapefruit, or ‘‘grapefruit pills’’ led to weight loss and improved insulin sensitivity [4]. Silver et al reported that grapefruit or GFJ consumption had no significant effects on metabolic variables, except for a modest increase in HDL, in obese participants fed a restricted calorie diet [5]

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