Rice bran contains essential nutrients, antioxidants, and bioactives with anti-inflammatory and diarrheal protective properties important for infants. This 6-month randomized controlled trial investigated the effects of heat-stabilized rice bran supplementation during Malian infant weaning. Fifty healthy 6-month-old infants were randomized to a rice bran intervention (N = 25) or non-intervention control group (N = 25). Intervention infants received dose-escalating rice bran supplementation for 6 months (1–5 g/day). Monthly infant dried blood spot and anthropometric measurements were collected. Dried blood spot metabolite abundances were compared monthly according to diet for six months. Supplementation resulted in favorable weight-for-age and weight-for-length z-score changes. Non-targeted dried blood spot-based metabolomics identified 796 metabolites, of which 33% had significant fold differences between groups (7–12 months). Lipids and amino acids represented 70.6% of the metabolites identified. Rice bran supplementation during infant weaning significantly modulated the metabolites involved in antioxidant defenses and with neuroactive properties including reduced glutathione, glycine, glutamate, cysteinylglycine, tryptophan betaine, and choline. These findings support rice bran as a weaning ingredient to meet infant nutritional requirements and with the potential to reduce oxidative stress and improve cognitive outcomes. This study provides evidence for dried blood spots as a cost-effective tool to detect infant biomarkers of nutritional and metabolic status.
Rat kidney contains 3.5-kb and 2.8-kb mRNAs that encode for glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH). The levels of both mRNAs are increased gradually after onset of chronic metabolic acidosis and reach a maximum induction of 2.5-fold after 7 days. In contrast, during recovery from chronic acidosis, the levels of the GDH mRNAs are returned to normal within 1 day. The development of an acute metabolic acidosis causes a more rapid induction of GDH mRNA. This increase occurs after a 7-h lag and plateaus after 18 h at a level that is threefold greater than normal. A very similar profile was observed after the transfer of LLC-PK-F+ cells from normal medium to an acidic medium containing 10 mM bicarbonate and adjusted to pH 6.9. However, the transfer of cells from acidic to normal medium caused an immediate and rapid [half-life (t) = 1 h] decrease in GDH mRNA. The apparent half-lives of GDH mRNA were measured by treating cells grown in normal (t = 4 h) and acidic media (t = 12 h) with actinomycin D. Thus, increased stability may account for the induction of GDH mRNA that occurs during growth in response to acidosis. The levels of GDH mRNA are independently affected by changes in medium pH or bicarbonate concentration. The levels of GDH mRNA are also increased by treating cells with adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate, epinephrine, triiodothyronine, or retinoic acid, whereas treatment with angiotensin II, vasopressin, phorbol 12-myristate 13-acetate, or cycloheximide did not produce an increase. The inductive effect of dexamethasone, which is observed in vivo, is not reproduced in the LLC-PK-F+ cells.
Purpose: Examine the feasibility and preliminary effects of a lifestyle intervention of rice bran plus navy bean supplementation, and physical activity (PA) education on intake of fiber and whole grains, and PA levels. Design: Randomized-controlled, single-blinded. Setting: Academic institution and free-living. Subjects: Adults >18 years, with ≥1 adenomatous polyp removed within 3 years. Intervention: Participants received powder and pre-prepared meals and snacks that contained either rice bran (30 g/day) plus navy bean (30 g/day), or Fibersol-2® (10 g/day), for 12-weeks. All participants received a 1-hour (PA) education session. Measures: Feasibility was assessed by recruitment and retention rates, and compliance to the study foods and procedures. Three-day food logs were analyzed using Nutritionist Pro™ to estimate fiber intake, and the Automated Self-Administered 24-hour (ASA24®) Dietary Assessment Tool calculated Healthy Eating Index (HEI) whole grain and total scores. PA was measured using an ActivPAL™ accelerometer. Analysis: Continuous data were summarized as median, range, and percent change from baseline to post-intervention. Results: N = 20 (86.9%) completed the intervention. Compliance was 92% in the rice bran plus navy bean versus 89% in Fibersol-2®. Navy bean consumption increased from 2 g/day to 30 g/day, and rice bran from 0 g/day to 30 g/day. Fiber intake (g/day) increased by 73% versus 82%, HEI whole grain improved by 270% versus 37%, and HEI total improved by 10% versus 9.1% in rice bran plus navy bean and Fibersol-2®, respectively. Total PA (MET-hours/day) showed minimal change for intervention (+0.04%) and control (+4%). Conclusion: Findings merit a larger trial of rice bran plus navy bean and PA to evaluate efficacy for dietary and cancer prevention-related outcomes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.