Title of article :
Soy protein reduces triglyceride levels and triglyceride fatty acid fractional synthesis rate in hypercholesterolemic subjects
Author/Authors :
Yanwen Wang، نويسنده , , Peter J. H. Jones، نويسنده , , Lynne M. Ausman، نويسنده , , Alice H. Lichtenstein، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Abstract :
To examine the effects of protein source and isoflavones on triglyceride (TG) fatty acid (TGFA) and cholesterol biosynthesis, subjects (>50 years, LDL cholesterol >130 mg/dl) underwent a four-phase randomized cross-over feeding trial. Diets contained either isolated soy protein or common sources of animal protein (25 g/1000 kcal), without or with isoflavones (49 mg/1000 kcal) and were each fed for 6 weeks. Blood samples from 20 hyperlipidemic subjects (6M, 14F, 62±9 years, BMI 26±3 kg/m2, LDL cholesterol >160 mg/dl after feeding animal protein without isoflavones) were selected to measure TGFA fractional synthetic rate (TGFA-FSR) and free cholesterol fractional synthetic rate (FC-FSR) over 24 h as deuterium oxide uptake into TGFA and free cholesterol. Soy protein reduced TG by 12.4% (P<0.0001), total cholesterol by 4.4% (P<0.001), and LDL cholesterol by 5.7% (P=0.003) compared to animal protein. The TGFA-FSR was reduced by13.3% (P=0.018) and FC-FSR was increased by 7.6% (P=0.017) after the soy protein relative to the animal protein. Isoflavones had no significant effect on TG and TGFA-FSR. Isoflavones reduced total cholesterol levels by 3.1% (P=0.009) but had no significant effect on LDL, HDL cholesterol levels, or FC-FSR. These data demonstrate that dietary protein type modulates circulating TG and cholesterol levels in hypercholesterolemic individuals by distinct mechanisms.
Keywords :
soy protein , animal protein , Isoflavones , Lipid profiles , Cholesterol biosynthesis , Triglyceride fatty acid biosynthesis
Journal title :
Atherosclerosis
Journal title :
Atherosclerosis