Title of article :
Carbohydrate restriction and dietary cholesterol distinctly affect plasma lipids and lipoprotein subfractions in adult guinea pigs
Author/Authors :
Moises Torres-Gonzalez، نويسنده , , Jose O. Leite، نويسنده , , Jeff S. Volek، نويسنده , , John H. Contois، نويسنده , , Maria Luz Fernandez، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
8
From page :
856
To page :
863
Abstract :
To evaluate the effects of carbohydrate restriction (CR) and dietary cholesterol on lipoprotein metabolism, adult male guinea pigs (10 guinea pigs/diet) were fed either low (0.04 g/100 g) or high (0.25 g/100 g) amounts of dietary cholesterol, in combination with either low (10% total energy) or high (54.2% total energy) dietary carbohydrate (control groups) for a total of four groups: high carbohydrate–low cholesterol (control-L), high carbohydrate–high cholesterol (control-H), low carbohydrate–low cholesterol (CR-L) and low carbohydrate–high cholesterol (CR-H). Plasma triglyceride concentrations were lower (P<.01%), while high-density lipoprotein cholesterol concentrations were higher (P<.05) in the CR groups compared to the control groups. In contrast, high dietary cholesterol (CR-H and control-H) resulted in higher concentrations of total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol compared to those guinea pigs fed the low-cholesterol diets (P<.01). Dietary cholesterol significantly increased the total number of LDL particles (P<.001) and the number of small LDL (P<.001), as determined by nuclear magnetic resonance. In contrast, carbohydrate restriction (CR-L and CR-H) resulted in lower concentrations of medium very-low-density lipoprotein and small LDL particles compared to the high-carbohydrate groups. Plasma lecithin:cholesterol acyltransferase (LCAT) activity was decreased and cholesterol ester transfer protein activity was increased by dietary cholesterol, whereas carbohydrate restriction increased LCAT activity (P<.05). These findings are similar to those observed in humans, thus validating the use of adult guinea pigs to study lipid responses to carbohydrate restriction. The results also indicate that the atherogenicity of lipoproteins induced by high dietary cholesterol is attenuated by carbohydrate restriction in guinea pigs.
Keywords :
Carbohydrate restriction , Dietary cholesterol , LDL subfractions , LCAT , CETP , Guinea pigs
Journal title :
The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry
Record number :
1299466
Link To Document :
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