Abstract

Controlling intestinal lipid absorption is an important strategy for maintaining lipid homeostasis. Accumulation of lipids in the liver is a major risk factor for metabolic syndrome and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. It is well-known that sphingomyelin (SM) can inhibit intestinal cholesterol absorption. It is, however, unclear if dietary SM also lowers liver lipid levels. In the present study (i) the effect of pure dietary egg SM on hepatic lipid metabolism and intestinal cholesterol absorption was measured with [14C]cholesterol and [3H]sitostanol in male C57BL/6 mice fed a high-fat (HF) diet with or without 0.6% wt/wt SM for 18 days; and (ii) hepatic lipid levels and gene expression were determined in mice given a HF diet with or without egg SM (0.3, 0.6 or 1.2% wt/wt) for 4 weeks. Mice supplemented with SM (0.6% wt/wt) had significantly increased fecal lipid and cholesterol output and reduced hepatic [14C]cholesterol levels after 18 days. Relative to HF-fed mice, SM-supplemented HF-fed mice had significantly lower intestinal cholesterol absorption (−30%). Liver weight was significantly lower in the 1.2% wt/wt SM-supplemented mice (−18%). Total liver lipid (mg/organ) was significantly reduced in the SM-supplemented mice (−33% and −40% in 0.6% wt/wt and 1.2% wt/wt SM, respectively), as were triglyceride and cholesterol levels. The reduction in liver triglycerides was due to inactivation of the LXR-SREBP-1c pathway. In conclusion, dietary egg SM has pronounced hepatic lipid-lowering properties in mice maintained on an obesogenic diet.

Highlights

  • Controlling lipid absorption in the intestine is an important strategy for maintaining lipid homeostasis

  • The results of the present study demonstrate that dietary SM potently decreases total hepatic cholesterol and triglyceride levels and reduces intestinal cholesterol absorption

  • This suggests that dietary SM may lower hepatic lipid levels by inhibiting intestinal cholesterol absorption, and is consistent with our previously published studies demonstrating the ability of dietary phospholipid extracts to reduce hepatic lipid levels and intestinal cholesterol absorption in high-fat fed mice [3,13]

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Summary

Introduction

Controlling lipid absorption in the intestine is an important strategy for maintaining lipid homeostasis. This study asks if dietary supplementation with sphingomyelin (SM) reduces cholesterol absorption in mice fed a high-fat (HF) western-type diet. A recent study reported plasma and hepatic lipid lowering effects in Zucker fatty rats fed a low-fat chow diet supplemented with chicken skin-derived SM for 6 weeks [9]. The lack of dietary fat in the chow diet used in that study did not address the question as to whether long-term dietary SM supplementation affects cholesterol absorption inhibition. Nor was it able to correlate the inhibition of intestinal cholesterol absorption to lipid-lowering effects [9]

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