2015
DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.201500703
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Dietary emulsifiers from milk and soybean differently impact adiposity and inflammation in association with modulation of colonic goblet cells in high‐fat fed mice

Abstract: Unlike SPL, MPL in the high-fat diet did not induce WAT hypertrophy and inflammation but increased colonic goblet cells. This supports further clinical exploration of different sources of dietary emulsifiers in the frame of obesity outbreak.

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Cited by 77 publications
(62 citation statements)
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References 55 publications
(74 reference statements)
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“…Moreover regarding the impact of PL emulsifiers, including soybean PL into the high fat diet resulted in higher expression of inflammatory markers in adipose tissue, namely leptin, TNF-alpha and MCP-1, together with a higher expression of LBP. In contrast, milk PL did not induce adipose tissue hypertrophy and inflammation, and both plasma LBP concentration and LBP expression in adipose tissue were lower in this group (Lecomte et al, 2016).…”
Section: Importance Of Lps Transportersmentioning
confidence: 57%
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“…Moreover regarding the impact of PL emulsifiers, including soybean PL into the high fat diet resulted in higher expression of inflammatory markers in adipose tissue, namely leptin, TNF-alpha and MCP-1, together with a higher expression of LBP. In contrast, milk PL did not induce adipose tissue hypertrophy and inflammation, and both plasma LBP concentration and LBP expression in adipose tissue were lower in this group (Lecomte et al, 2016).…”
Section: Importance Of Lps Transportersmentioning
confidence: 57%
“…Mice were fed a high-fat diet containing 20% of lipids (mostly palm oil) or modified diets in which 1.2% of oil has been replaced with 1.2% soybean phospholipids or 1.2% milk phospholipids. The diet containing soybean PL (commonly called soybean lecithin) induced adipose tissue hypertrophy and increased markers of inflammation, including circulating LBP concentration and its expression by the adipose tissue, compared with the high fat diet devoid of PL (Lecomte et al, 2016). Interestingly, milk PL did not induce such effect, which could be partly due to their effect on providing faster triglyceride digestion and absorption compared with soybean PL as also observed in vitro and in mice (Lecomte et al, 2015).…”
Section: Oil Composition Emulsified Structure and Dietary Emulsifiermentioning
confidence: 84%
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“…This way, all high‐fat diets contained the same amount of milk TG (1.4%) but differed by the amount of MPL (0%, 1.1%, or 1.6% as specifically analyzed). Of note, 1.1% of MPL is equivalent to ≈25 mg SM kg –1 of body weight in a human using the Human Equivalent Dose calculation of the FDA . An additional group was fed a chow diet (low‐fat, LF) to be used as a reference group.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%