This time, the magic is in the leaves, not the fruits or kernels. And it's dose dependent. With an almost linear increase from 500-1,000mg/kg |
In the case of the ethanolic extract of seabuckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides L) Pichiah et al. used in their most recent experiment, this would be ameliorative effects on weight gain through down-regulation of adipogenic and lipogenic gene expression.
Less weight gain more fatty acid turnover, better glucose management and leptin sensitivity
The ameliorative effects on the detoriation of glucose metabolism, the reduced but still significant weight gain of the 60% fat diet (additional fat 100% from lard) and the profound overexpression of leptin, which is indicative of the fact that the mice developed full-blown leptin resistance within the 13-weeks of HFD administration, were all ameliorated to a greater degree in the high dose seabuckthorn leaf extract group (human equivalent ~6.5g/day).
"[...] by soaking the dried, powdered leaves in 70% ethanol for 7 days at room temperature. Then the extract was concentrated by evaporating ethanol using a rotary vacuum evaporator (N-N Series, EYELA, Tokyo, JAPAN) set at 60°C and 100 hPa" (Pichiah. 2012)were even more pronounced, when we compare the effects on fatty acid oxidation (CPT-1), the PPAR-alpha and -gamma values.
The effects of a 5% conjugated linoleic acid diet do actually resemble that of lipodystrophy, i.e. pathological fat loss and inability to store body fat. Strange, no? Well that's PPAR-gamma (read more). |
In fact, the PPAR-gamma suppressing effects of the trans-10, cis-12 isomer of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA; cf. Kennedy. 2008) are actually what what produces such profound effects, as they were observed in the study I discussed on July 22, 2012 (see link beneath the image of the mice).
TTA and fish oil are potent antagonists of liver PPAR expression. With the uncoupling and anti-inflammatory effects of TTA being the key to unleash & maintain fat-burning (read more). |
This in turn reminds me of the effects of fish oil and TTA (a pan PPAR-activator), which - despite their questionable use as a long-term intervention can in fact stimulate intra-hepatic fatty acid oxidation to levels which are so high that oxidation rates in and out of itself could bring about some problems.
Other nutritional factors you should take into account are choline (a deficiency will actually cause fatty liver disease; read more about choline) or taurine. And on the endocrine side of things you want to keep an eye on optimal DHEA levels (read more about its effects on PPAR-gamma), thyroid hormones, testosterone and estrogen (Nemoto. 2000).
References
- Kennedy A, Chung S, LaPoint K, Fabiyi O, McIntosh MK. Trans-10, cis-12 conjugated linoleic acid antagonizes ligand-dependent PPARgamma activity in primary cultures of human adipocytes. J Nutr. 2008 Mar;138(3):455-61.
- Nemoto Y, Toda K, Ono M, Fujikawa-Adachi K, Saibara T, Onishi S, Enzan H, Okada T, Shizuta Y. Altered expression of fatty acid-metabolizing enzymes in aromatase-deficient mice. J Clin Invest. 2000 Jun;105(12):1819-25.
- Pichiah PB, Moon HJ, Park JE, Moon YJ, Cha YS. Ethanolic extract of seabuckthorn (Hippophae rhamnoides L) prevents high-fat diet-induced obesity in mice through down-regulation of adipogenic and lipogenic gene expression. Nutr Res. 2012 Nov;32(11):856-64.
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