Comparison of the Effects of the 1975 Japanese Diet and the Modern Mediterranean Diet on Lipid Metabolism in Mice

The Japanese diet and the Mediterranean diet are both known to be good for health, but there had been no direct comparison of their health benefits. In this study, we compared the 1975 Japanese diet, which has been found to have high health benefits, with the 2010 Italian diet, which contributes to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of Oleo Science 2017, Vol.66(5), pp.507-519
Hauptverfasser: Mizowaki, Yui, Sugawara, Saeko, Yamamoto, Kazushi, Sakamoto, Yu, Iwagaki, Yui, Kawakami, Yuki, Igarashi, Miki, Tsuduki, Tsuyoshi
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container_issue 5
container_start_page 507
container_title Journal of Oleo Science
container_volume 66
creator Mizowaki, Yui
Sugawara, Saeko
Yamamoto, Kazushi
Sakamoto, Yu
Iwagaki, Yui
Kawakami, Yuki
Igarashi, Miki
Tsuduki, Tsuyoshi
description The Japanese diet and the Mediterranean diet are both known to be good for health, but there had been no direct comparison of their health benefits. In this study, we compared the 1975 Japanese diet, which has been found to have high health benefits, with the 2010 Italian diet, which contributes to the longest life expectancy in Mediterranean countries. Diets were created using one-week menus of the two diets based on FAOSTAT Food Balance Sheets. The diets were prepared, freeze-dried, powdered and fed to mice for 4 weeks to examine their effects on lipid metabolism. In mice fed the Japanese diet, the visceral fat weight was lower, adipocytes were smaller, the liver weight was lower and liver TG tended to be lower than those fed the Italian diet, and little lipid accumulation was observed in hepatocytes of mice fed the Japanese diet. In addition, in mice fed the Japanese diet, the expression levels of genes related to fatty acid synthesis were lower, whereas those of genes related to catabolism of fatty acids and cholesterol were higher than those fed the Italian diet. Therefore, the Japanese diet reduced accumulation of lipids in the white adipose tissue and liver by suppressing fatty acid synthesis and promoting catabolism of fatty acids and cholesterol in the liver, compared to the Italian diet.
doi_str_mv 10.5650/jos.ess16241
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subjects 1975 Japanese diet
Accumulation
Adipose tissue
Adipose Tissue, White - metabolism
Animals
Catabolism
Cholesterol
Cholesterol - metabolism
Diet
Diet, Mediterranean
Fatty acids
Fatty Acids - metabolism
Gene expression
Genes
Italian diet
Japan
Japanese diet
Life expectancy
Lipid Metabolism
Lipids
Liver
Liver - metabolism
Male
Mediterranean diet
Metabolism
Mice, Inbred ICR
Nuclear energy
Synthesis
Weight
title Comparison of the Effects of the 1975 Japanese Diet and the Modern Mediterranean Diet on Lipid Metabolism in Mice
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