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  5. Fish-Derived Protein Hydrolysates Increase Insulin Sensitivity and Alter Intestinal Microbiome in High-Fat-Induced Obese Mice

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Article
English
2023

Fish-Derived Protein Hydrolysates Increase Insulin Sensitivity and Alter Intestinal Microbiome in High-Fat-Induced Obese Mice

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0 Files

English
2023
Marine Drugs
Vol 21 (6)
DOI: 10.3390/md21060343

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Antiopi Tsoureki
Antiopi Tsoureki

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Maria Daskalaki
Konstantinos Axarlis
Antiopi Tsoureki
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Abstract

Obesity and type 2 diabetes are characterized by low-grade systemic inflammation and glucose intolerance, which can be partially controlled with nutritional interventions. Protein-containing nutritional supplements possess health-promoting benefits. Herein, we examined the effect of dietary supplementation with protein hydrolysates derived from fish sidestreams on obesity and diabetes, utilizing a mouse model of High-Fat Diet-induced obesity and type 2 diabetes. We examined the effect of protein hydrolysates from salmon and mackerel backbone (HSB and HMB, respectively), salmon and mackerel heads (HSH and HMH, respectively), and fish collagen. The results showed that none of the dietary supplements affected weight gain, but HSH partially suppressed glucose intolerance, while HMB and HMH suppressed leptin increase in the adipose tissue. We further analyzed the gut microbiome, which contributes to the metabolic disease implicated in the development of type 2 diabetes, and found that supplementation with selected protein hydrolysates resulted in distinct changes in gut microbiome composition. The most prominent changes occurred when the diet was supplemented with fish collagen since it increased the abundance of beneficial bacteria and restricted the presence of harmful ones. Overall, the results suggest that protein hydrolysates derived from fish sidestreams can be utilized as dietary supplements with significant health benefits in the context of type 2 diabetes and diet-induced changes in the gut microbiome.

How to cite this publication

Maria Daskalaki, Konstantinos Axarlis, Antiopi Tsoureki, Sofia Michailidou, Christina Efraimoglou, Ioanna Lapi, Ourania Kolliniati, Eirini Dermitzaki, Maria Venihaki, Katerina Kousoulaki, Anagnostis Argiriou, Christos Tsatsanis (2023). Fish-Derived Protein Hydrolysates Increase Insulin Sensitivity and Alter Intestinal Microbiome in High-Fat-Induced Obese Mice. Marine Drugs, 21(6), pp. 343-343, DOI: 10.3390/md21060343.

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Publication Details

Type

Article

Year

2023

Authors

12

Datasets

0

Total Files

0

Language

English

Journal

Marine Drugs

DOI

10.3390/md21060343

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