Title of article :
A fermented mixed tea made with camellia (Camellia japonica) and third-crop green tea leaves prevents nonalcoholic steatohepatitis in Sprague-Dawley rats fed a high-fat and high-cholesterol diet
Author/Authors :
omagari, katsuhisa university of nagasaki - faculty of nursing and nutrition, graduate school of human health science - department of nutrition, division of nutritional science, Nagasaki, Japan , suruga, kazuhito university of nagasaki - faculty of nursing and nutrition, graduate school of human health science - department of nutrition, division of nutritional science, Nagasaki, Japan , kyogoku, akira university of nagasaki - faculty of nursing and nutrition - department of nutrition, Nagasaki, Japan , nakamura, satomi university of nagasaki - faculty of nursing and nutrition - department of nutrition, Nagasaki, Japan , sakamoto, ai university of nagasaki - faculty of nursing and nutrition - department of nutrition, Nagasaki, Japan , nishioka, shinta university of nagasaki - graduate school of human health science - division of nutritional science, Nagasaki, Japan , ichimura, mayuko university of nagasaki - graduate school of human health science - division of nutritional science, Nagasaki, Japan , miyata, yuji agriculture and forestry technical development center - tea laboratory, Nagasaki, japan , tajima, koichi agriculture and forestry technical development center - forest research section, Nagasaki, Japan , tsuneyama, koichi tokushima university - graduate school - department of pathology and laboratory medicine, Tokushima, Japan , tanaka, kazunari university of nagasaki - faculty of nursing and nutrition, graduate school of human health science - department of nutrition, division of nutritional science, Nagasaki, Japan
From page :
175
To page :
184
Abstract :
Background: Established treatments for non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) are few, thus it is imperative to develop novel dietary strategies that can prevent NASH. A fermented mixed tea (FMT) made with Camellia japonica (Japanese camellia) and third- crop green tea leaves by tea-rolling processing was reported to reduce body weight and adipose tissue weight in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. Because visceral fat is one of the most important factors for the development of hepatic steatosis, this FMT supplementation can be a candidate dietary strategy for the prevention of NASH. Methods: Nine-week-old male SD rats were fed a high-fat and high-cholesterol (HFC) diets with or without FMT (camellia and third-crop green tea leaves at ratios of 1:5, 1:2 and 1:1) for 9 weeks (n=6–7/ group). Histopathology, serology and expressions of fibrogenetic, proinflammatory, oxidative stress and lipid metabolism-related genes in the liver were evaluated. Results: Histologically, HFC diet with FMT at a ratio of 1:5 dramatically reduced NASH progression (14%) compared to the HFC diet without FMT (100%). FMT at a ratio of 1:5 reduced hepatic steatosis due to the activation of microsomal triglyceride transfer protein, and FMT at a ratio of 1:2 reduced mRNA levels of some proinflammatory, lipid metabolism-related, fibrogenic and oxidative stress marker genes. Conclusions: Our data suggest that FMT at a ratio of 1:5 or 1:2 likely possesses a preventive effect on NASH progression.
Keywords :
Camellia leaves , green tea leaves , fermented tea , nonalcoholic steatohepatitis , high , fat and highcholesterol (HFC) diet
Journal title :
Hepatobiliary Surgery an‎d Nutrition
Journal title :
Hepatobiliary Surgery an‎d Nutrition
Record number :
2654471
Link To Document :
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