Abstract
BackgroundOlive oil and its minor constituents have been recommended as important dietary therapeutic interventions in preventive medicine. However, a question remains to be addressed: what are the effects of olive oil and its phenolic compounds on obesity-induced cardiac metabolic changes?MethodsMale Wistar rats were divided into two groups (n = 24/group): (C) receiving standard-chow; (Ob) receiving hypercaloric-chow. After 21 days C and Ob groups were divided into four subgroups (n = 6/group):(C) standard-chow and saline; (C-Olive)standard-chow and olive-oil (3.0 g/kg.day); (C-Oleuropein)standard-chow and oleuropein (0.023 mg/kg/day); (C-Cafeic) standard-chow and cafeic-acid (2.66 mg/kg/day); (Ob)receiving hypercaloric-chow and saline;(Ob-Olive) hypercaloric-chow and olive-oil;(Ob-Oleuropein) hypercaloric-chow and oleuropein;(Ob-Cafeic) hypercaloric-chow and cafeic-acid. Treatments were given twice a week during 21 days.ResultsAfter 42 days, obesity was evidenced in Ob rats from enhanced body-weight, surface-area, and body-mass-index. Energy-expenditure, oxygen consumption(VO2) and fat-oxidation were lower in Ob-group than in C. Despite no morphometric changes, Ob-Olive, Ob-Oleuropein and Ob-Cafeic groups had higher VO2, fat-oxidation, myocardial beta-hydroxyacyl coenzyme-A dehydrogenase and lower respiratory-quotient than Ob. Citrate-synthase was highest in Ob-Olive group. Myocardial lipid-hydroperoxide(LH) and antioxidant enzymes were unaffected by olive-oil and its compounds in obesity condition, whereas LH was lower and total-antioxidant-substances were higher in C-Olive and C-Oleuropein than in C.ConclusionsThe present study demonstrated for the first time that olive-oil, oleuropein and cafeic-acid enhanced fat-oxidation and optimized cardiac energy metabolism in obesity conditions. Olive oil and its phenolic compounds improved myocardial oxidative stress in standard-fed conditions.
Highlights
Olive oil and its minor constituents have been recommended as important dietary therapeutic interventions in preventive medicine
Cardiac muscle utilizes a variety of substrates to produce energy, and the heart can shift from one substrate to another depending on food intake and pathophysiological state [11]
Despite no changes in food consumption, the energy intake was higher in Ob than in C rats
Summary
Olive oil and its minor constituents have been recommended as important dietary therapeutic interventions in preventive medicine. Recent research has suggested that olive oil minor constituents might have more effects on health than once believed [1,2,3,4,5]. On this concern, a group of olive oil phenolic compounds, such as oleuropein and cafeic acid have attracted considerable attention because of their anti-diabetic [6,7], anti-atherosclerotic [8] and anti-inflammatory [9] properties. Recent research in our laboratory demonstrated that enhanced energy intake reduced the mitochondrial membrane fluidity, increasing ROS generation [12,15]
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