Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine

Abstract The effects of different proportions of dietary sorghum rice and black rice on the expression of genes related to cholesterol metabolism in mice liver, intestine, and the characteristics of the small intestinal microbiota were investigated. Six types of diets were used to feed C57BL/6 mice:...

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Main Authors: Haiying Liu, Lu Huang, Xinli Pei
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-01-01
Series:Food Science & Nutrition
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.1986
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spelling doaj-efe1b4232c394a3ba1437c04a4bfb3112021-03-19T11:50:38ZengWileyFood Science & Nutrition2048-71772021-01-019121722910.1002/fsn3.1986Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestineHaiying Liu0Lu Huang1Xinli Pei2State Key Laboratory of Food Science and Technology Jiangnan University Wuxi ChinaSchool of Food Science and Technology Jiangnan University Wuxi ChinaSchool of Food Science and Technology Jiangnan University Wuxi ChinaAbstract The effects of different proportions of dietary sorghum rice and black rice on the expression of genes related to cholesterol metabolism in mice liver, intestine, and the characteristics of the small intestinal microbiota were investigated. Six types of diets were used to feed C57BL/6 mice: AIN‐93M standard diet, high‐cholesterol model diet, high‐cholesterol and low‐dose sorghum grain or black rice diet, and high‐cholesterol and high‐dose sorghum grain or black rice diet. The results showed that black rice or sorghum grain diets had no effect on the serum TC, LDL‐C levels in the hypercholesterolemic mice, whereas these diets decreased serum TG level, and black rice diets increased serum HDL‐C level. The diets containing black rice and sorghum grain had no effect on liver TC, TG, HDL‐C levels. However, these diets decreased LDL‐C levels significantly except high dose of black rice. The black rice or sorghum grain diets reduced the expression of the genes encoding liver 3‐hydroxyl‐3‐methyl‐glutarate monoacyl coenzyme A reductase (HMG‐CoA‐R) and increased the expression of SREBP‐2, thereby partially inhibiting the synthesis of cholesterol in liver. The diets containing different proportions of black rice and a low proportion of sorghum grain reduced the expression level of Niemann–Pick type C 1 like 1 (NPC1L1) mRNA and increased the mRNA level of the ATP‐binding cassette transporters, ABCG5/ABCG8, in the small intestine, thereby reducing cholesterol absorption. A diet containing a low proportion of black rice promoted the expression of ABCA1 mRNA and increased the expression of high‐density lipoprotein (HDL) mRNA, thereby promoting reverse cholesterol transport. Black rice diets significantly increased the relative abundances of microbiota in the small intestine and maintained biodiversity, while sorghum grain had no positive effect on the abundance of microbiota.https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.1986black ricecholesterolhypercholesterolemiaintestinal microbiotasorghum rice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Haiying Liu
Lu Huang
Xinli Pei
spellingShingle Haiying Liu
Lu Huang
Xinli Pei
Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine
Food Science & Nutrition
black rice
cholesterol
hypercholesterolemia
intestinal microbiota
sorghum rice
author_facet Haiying Liu
Lu Huang
Xinli Pei
author_sort Haiying Liu
title Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine
title_short Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine
title_full Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine
title_fullStr Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine
title_full_unstemmed Effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine
title_sort effects of sorghum rice and black rice on genes associated with cholesterol metabolism in hypercholesterolemic mice liver and intestine
publisher Wiley
series Food Science & Nutrition
issn 2048-7177
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract The effects of different proportions of dietary sorghum rice and black rice on the expression of genes related to cholesterol metabolism in mice liver, intestine, and the characteristics of the small intestinal microbiota were investigated. Six types of diets were used to feed C57BL/6 mice: AIN‐93M standard diet, high‐cholesterol model diet, high‐cholesterol and low‐dose sorghum grain or black rice diet, and high‐cholesterol and high‐dose sorghum grain or black rice diet. The results showed that black rice or sorghum grain diets had no effect on the serum TC, LDL‐C levels in the hypercholesterolemic mice, whereas these diets decreased serum TG level, and black rice diets increased serum HDL‐C level. The diets containing black rice and sorghum grain had no effect on liver TC, TG, HDL‐C levels. However, these diets decreased LDL‐C levels significantly except high dose of black rice. The black rice or sorghum grain diets reduced the expression of the genes encoding liver 3‐hydroxyl‐3‐methyl‐glutarate monoacyl coenzyme A reductase (HMG‐CoA‐R) and increased the expression of SREBP‐2, thereby partially inhibiting the synthesis of cholesterol in liver. The diets containing different proportions of black rice and a low proportion of sorghum grain reduced the expression level of Niemann–Pick type C 1 like 1 (NPC1L1) mRNA and increased the mRNA level of the ATP‐binding cassette transporters, ABCG5/ABCG8, in the small intestine, thereby reducing cholesterol absorption. A diet containing a low proportion of black rice promoted the expression of ABCA1 mRNA and increased the expression of high‐density lipoprotein (HDL) mRNA, thereby promoting reverse cholesterol transport. Black rice diets significantly increased the relative abundances of microbiota in the small intestine and maintained biodiversity, while sorghum grain had no positive effect on the abundance of microbiota.
topic black rice
cholesterol
hypercholesterolemia
intestinal microbiota
sorghum rice
url https://doi.org/10.1002/fsn3.1986
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