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Antioxidant Supplements Improve Profiles of Hepatic Oxysterols and Plasma Lipids in Butter-fed Hamsters
Author(s) -
Johanne Poirier,
Kevin A. Cockell,
W. M. N. Ratnayake,
Kylie A. Scoggan,
Nick Hidiroglou,
Claude Gag,
Hélène Rocheleau,
Heidi Gruber,
Philip J. Griffin,
René Madère,
Keith D. Trick,
Stan Kubow
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
nutrition and metabolic insights
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1178-6388
DOI - 10.4137/nmi.s3911
Subject(s) - oxysterol , selenium , cholesterol , antioxidant , chemistry , medicine , endocrinology , selenate , lipid peroxidation , tocopherol , oxidative stress , vitamin e , biochemistry , biology , organic chemistry
Hypercholesterolemic diets are associated with oxidative stress that may contribute to hypercholesterolemia by adversely affecting enzymatically-generated oxysterols involved in cholesterol homeostasis. An experiment was conducted to examine whether the cholesterol-lowering effects of the antioxidants selenium and α-tocopherol were related to hepatic oxysterol concentrations. Four groups of male Syrian hamsters (n = 7-8) were fed high cholesterol and saturated fat (0.46% cholesterol, 14.3% fat) hypercholesterolemic semi-purified diets: 1) Control; 2) Control + α-tocopherol (67 IU all-racemic-α-tocopheryl-acetate/kg diet); 3) Control + selenium (3.4 mg selenate/kg diet); and 4) Control + α-tocopherol + selenium. Antioxidant supplementation was associated with lowered plasma cholesterol concentrations, decreased tissue lipid peroxidation and higher hepatic oxysterol concentrations. A second experiment examined the effect of graded selenium doses (0.15, 0.85, 1.7 and 3.4 mg selenate/kg diet) on mRNA expression of the oxysterol-generating enzyme, hepatic 27-hydroxylase (CYP27A1, EC 1.14.13.15), in hamsters (n = 8-9) fed the hypercholesterolemic diets. Supplementation of selenium at 3.4 mg selenate/kg diet was not associated with increased hepatic 27-hydroxylase mRNA. In conclusion, the cholesterol lowering effects of selenium and α-tocopherol were associated with increased hepatic enzymatically generated oxysterol concentrations, which appears to be mediated via improved antioxidant status rather than increased enzymatic production.

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