Positive Impacts of Aphanizomenon Flos Aquae Extract on Obesity-Related Dysmetabolism in Mice with Diet-Induced Obesity

Author:

Terzo Simona1,Calvi Pasquale12ORCID,Giardina Marta1,Gallizzi Giacoma3,Di Carlo Marta3ORCID,Nuzzo Domenico3ORCID,Picone Pasquale3,Puleio Roberto4ORCID,Mulè Flavia1,Scoglio Stefano5,Amato Antonella13

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological-Chemical-Pharmaceutical Science and Technology, University of Palermo, 90128 Palermo, Italy

2. Department of Biomedicine, Neuroscience and Advanced Diagnostic, University of Palermo, 90127 Palermo, Italy

3. Istituto per la Ricerca e l’Innovazione Biomedica (IRIB), CNR, Via U. La Malfa 153, 90146 Palermo, Italy

4. Istituto Zooprofilattico Sperimentale della Sicilia “A. Mirri”, Via Gino Marinuzzi 3, 90129 Palermo, Italy

5. Centro di Ricerche Nutriterapiche, 61029 Urbino, Italy

Abstract

The present study evaluated the ability of KlamExtra®, an Aphanizomenon flos aquae (AFA) extract, to counteract metabolic dysfunctions due to a high fat diet (HFD) or to accelerate their reversion induced by switching an HFD to a normocaloric diet in mice with diet-induced obesity. A group of HFD mice was fed with an HFD supplemented with AFA (HFD-AFA) and another one was fed with regular chow (standard diet—STD) alone or supplemented with AFA (STD-AFA). AFA was able to significantly reduce body weight, hypertriglyceridemia, liver fat accumulation and adipocyte size in HFD mice. AFA also reduced hyperglycaemia, insulinaemia, HOMA-IR and ameliorated the glucose tolerance and the insulin response of obese mice. Furthermore, in obese mice AFA normalised the gene and the protein expression of factors involved in lipid metabolism (FAS, PPAR-γ, SREBP-1c and FAT-P mRNA), inflammation (TNF-α and IL-6 mRNA, NFkB and IL-10 proteins) and oxidative stress (ROS levels and SOD activity). Interestingly, AFA accelerated the STD-induced reversion of glucose dysmetabolism, hepatic and VAT inflammation and oxidative stress. In conclusion, AFA supplementation prevents HFD-induced dysmetabolism and accelerates the STD-dependent recovery of glucose dysmetabolism by positively modulating oxidative stress, inflammation and the expression of the genes linked to lipid metabolism.

Funder

IRIB-CNR

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Medicine

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