Shermann et al. investigated the effect of caffeine consumption (3.5 mg/kg/day or 7 mg/kg/day) on circadian rhythms and expression of disease and metabolic markers in mice under two distinct dietary conditions over a period of sixteen weeks. When the rats were fed an ad libitum diet (meaning they could consume as much food as they wanted), ...
caffeine reduced the average daily mRNA levels of certain disease and inflammatory markers, such as liver alpha fetoprotein (Afp), C-reactive protein (Crp), jejunum alanine aminotransferase (Alt), growth arrest and DNA damage 45β (Gadd45β), Interleukin 1α (Il-1α), Il-1β mRNA and serum plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI-1).For those of you who still want to shed some pounds of fat, it may yet be even more interesting to read that "caffeine supplementation led to decreased expression of catabolic factors under RF". With the RF = restricted feeding condition being comparable to what is known as "intermittent fasting" in the fitness community, this finding is highly significant.
Figure 1: Metabolic markers PPAR-Gamma (above) and PPAR-Alpha (below) in mice fed an ad libitum (AL) or a restricted diet (RF) (Shermann. 2011) |
0 comments:
Post a Comment