Title of article :
Differential protective effects of extra virgin olive oil and corn oil in liver injury: A proteomic study
Author/Authors :
Wang، نويسنده , , Hualin and Sit، نويسنده , , Wat-Hung and Tipoe، نويسنده , , George Lim and Wan، نويسنده , , Jennifer Man-Fan Wan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
Extra virgin olive oil (EVOO) presents benefits against chronic liver injury induced by hepatotoxins such as carbon tetrachloride (CCl4); however, the protective mechanisms remain unclear. In the present study, a two-dimensional gel based proteomic approach was constructed to explore the mechanisms. Rats are injected with CCl4 twice a week for 4 weeks to induce liver fibrosis, and were fed laboratory chow plus 20% (w/w) of either corn oil or EVOO over the entire experimental period. Histological staining, MDA assay and fibrogenesis marker gene analysis illustrate that the CCl4-treated animals fed EVOO have a lower fibrosis and lipid peroxidation level in the liver than the corn oil fed group. The proteomic study indicates that the protein expression of thioredoxin domain-containing protein 12, peroxiredoxin-1, thiosulphate sulphurtransferase, calcium-binding protein 1, Annexin A2 and heat shock cognate 71 kDa protein are higher in livers from EVOO-fed rats with the CCl4 treatment compared with those from rats fed with corn oil, whereas the expression of COQ9, cAMP-dependent protein kinase type I-alpha regulatory subunit, phenylalanine hydroxylase and glycerate kinase are lower. Our findings confirmed the benefits of EVOO against chronic liver injury, which may be attributable to the antioxidant effects, hepatocellular function regulation and hepatic metabolism modification effects of EVOO.
Keywords :
Liver , PROTEOMICS , Extra virgin olive oil , corn oil , Carbon tetrachloride
Journal title :
Food and Chemical Toxicology
Journal title :
Food and Chemical Toxicology