Introduction
High cholesterol in blood can cause cardiovascular disease (Wardlaw et al., 2005), piles up and creates plaque at vessel walls, possibly leading to atherosclerosis. The blood vessel can narrow and blood circulation can be restricted so oxygen in the blood cannot reach the heart or brain, causing makes heart attacks (Wardlaw et al., 2005; Xiao et al., 2003).
Yogurt contains lactic acid bacteria. It is a probiotic food which can cause beneficial effects in the intestinal tract of humans (Odamaki et al., 2011; Tang et al., 2014). Yogurt is proven to remove cholesterol as well as decrease the serum cholesterol and low density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol (Akalin et al., 1997; Anderson et al., 1999; Kapila et al., 2006; Pereira et al., 2003). Therefore, yogurt can be a beneficial food for patients with cardiovascular disease.
Meanwhile, Korean pepper, especially chung-yang pepper, is famous for its pungency which results from capsaicin. Capsaicin and its several homologues are categorized as capsaicinoids. Most of the pungency results from capsaicin and dihydrocapsaicin (Iwai and Watanabe, 1999). Capsaicin inhibits body fat accumulation and promotes energy expenditure, pain relief, antibacterial activity, antioxidant activity, anti-stress activity, and inhibition of tumor cell growth (Chatteriee et al., 2010; Chen et al., 2014; Dou et al., 2011; Gerner et al., 2008; Iwai and Watanabe, 1999; Luo et al., 2011; Reinbach et al., 2009; Shin and Moritani et al., 2007). Although capsaiscin has various effects, its application in the food industry is limited because of its pungency (Kim et al., 2011).
Capsaicinoids can be degraded by several microorganisms (Cho et al., 2014; Flagan and Leadbetter, 2006; Kim et al., 2011; Lee et al., 2008). In a previous experiment, the amount of capsaicin and dihydrocapsaicin decreased as pepper was fermented by Bacillus licheniformis (Yeon et al., 2013). Fermented pepper inhibited body fat accumulation in mice fed a high fat diet even if it lost pungency. It might have lost pungency because the food intake between the control diet fed group and the fermented pepper diet fed group showed no significant difference (Yeon et al., 2013). On the other hand, a group fed the same concentration of normal pepper diet showed significantly lowered total food intake (Yeon et al., 2013).
There is little information about the application of fermented pepper on yogurt. Yogurt is popular probiotic desert which can drink easily. It is important whether fermented pepper act as functional effect even if it is in yogurt. In this experiment, pepper juice was fermented and added to yogurt to identify the effect of degraded capsaicin in yogurt on decreasing cholesterol concentration and body fat accumulation in rats fed a high fat and high cholesterol diet (HFCD).
Materials and Methods
Preparation of fermented pepper juice
Pepper juice was extracted from chung-yang pepper that was purchased from a local market in Seoul, Korea by a juicer. This sample was mixed with bacillus minimal medium of double concentration (Bacillus minimal medium ×2 : NaCl 1 g/L, Na2HPO4 9.52 g/L, KH2PO4 6 g/L, NH4Cl2 g/L, MgSO4 0.48 g/L, CaCl2 0.02 g/L, glucose 3.6 g/L) without glucose (1:1, v/v). After adjustment to pH 7, it was sterilized and 5% of Bacillus licheniformis SK1230 was inoculated after cooling at 37°C. It was then incubated at 37℃ for 5 d.
Preparation of yogurts
The composition of yogurt mix is expressed in Table 1. Milk, skim milk powder, pectin, sugar, distilled water and fermented pepper juice were mixed using a homogenizer (Homogenizer T25, Janke and Kunkel type, Germany) for 10 min. Then, it was heated at 85℃ for 30 min. After cooling at 42℃, the starter was inoculated and the mixture was incubated at 42℃ until it reached pH 4.5. This yogurt was stored at 4℃ for 24 h and then freeze dried to add to experimental diets. Ten milliliter of distilled water was added to the premix of plain yogurt as a substitute for fermented pepper juice. Starter (Lyofast YAB 450 AB, Sacco srl., Italy) contained Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacteriumanimalis ssp. lacti.
Table 1.1)Starter: Streptococcus thermophilus, Lactobacillus delbrueckii ssp. bulgaricus, Lactobacillus acidophilus and Bifidobacteriumanimalis ssp. lacti. (Lyofast YAB 450 AB, Sacco srl., Codarago, Italy).
Animal experiment
Seven wk old 25 Sprague-Dawley male rats (Central Lab. Animal Inc., Korea) were individually housed in plastic cages and were acclimated for one wk. Then, animals were randomly assigned into five groups (five rats/group); the weights of each group were not significantly different (p> 0.05). The room was maintained at 22 ± 2℃, 50 ± 5% humidity, and a 12 h light/dark cycle during the 9 wk experimental period. The animal experiment was approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee (IACUC approval no. KU13090).
Experimental groups were as follows; CON (control diet), HFCD (45% kcal high fat and high cholesterol diet; HFCD), PY (HFCD supplemented with plain yogurt diet), LFY (HFCD supplemented with 2% fermented pepper juice yogurt), and HFY (HFCD supplemented with 5% fermented pepper juice yogurt). The ingredients of feed are represented in Table 2. The feeding amount was restricted to 20.5 g/mouse/1 d and tap water was available ad libitum.
Table 2.1)CON: control diet fed group.2)HFCD: high fat and high cholesterol diet fed group.3)PY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% plain yogurt powder.4)LFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.5)HFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 5% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.
The body weight was measured once a week and food intake was weighed at the same time each day using a balance (Adventurer AR2140, OHAUS crop, USA). Food intake was calculated as the difference of the feed ration of the day before and remains of the day. Feed efficiency ratio (FER) was calculated as follows; FER (%) = body weight gain (g) / total food intake (g) × 100.
All animals had an adaptation period of 1 wk and each experimental diet was offered to each group for 9 wk. After fasting of 24 h, dissection was performed. Anesthesia was accomplished by diethyl ether. Blood was gathered from the abdominal vein and the spleen, liver, cecum, kidney, epididymal adipose tissue (EAT), and perirenal adipose tissue (PAT) were weighed.
Serum analysis
After standing at 25℃ for 3 h, serum was separated from blood and centrifuged (VS-550, Vision Scientific, Korea) at 3,000 rpm for 20 min at 4℃. Serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST), total cholesterol, high density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL cholesterol) and glucose were analyzed by Green Cross Corp. (Korea).
Liver analysis
Total lipid content was analyzed by modified Folch’s method (Folch et al., 1956). The liver was homogenized with 0.85% NaCl, and the residue was washed with Chloroform/methanol (2:1, v/v). After centrifuging at 3,000 rpm for 20 min, the supernatant and floating matter were removed. Residue was transferred to previously weighed tube and concentrated with N2 gas. Total lipid content was calculated as concentrated tube weight minus previous weight of the tube.
Total cholesterol content was analyzed using a kit (Asan Pharm. Co., Korea). 2 mL of ethanol was added to the concentrated total lipid sample. Then, 20 µL was mixed with 3 mL of enzyme solution. After storage at 37℃ for 5 min, absorbance was measured at 500 nm (Optizen 2120 UV, Mecasys Co. Ltd., Korea).
Statistical analysis
All data were expressed as mean ± standard deviation, and analyzed by Tukey’s multiple-range test using SAS ver. 8.2 software (SAS Institute, USA). Significance was declared at p<0.05. Extremely different value was excluded.
Results and Discussion
Body weights, food intake, and FER during the experimental period are summarized in Table 3. Initial body weight in each group was not significantly different (p>0.05). Final body weight in the HFY group significantly decreased comparing to the HFCD group (p<0.05). FER in the high fat diet fed groups were significantly higher than that of the CON group (p<0.05), but the HFY group showed lower FER as compared to other high fat diet fed groups (p>0.05). Total food intake was same except for the HFCD group but it was not significantly lower than the other groups (p>0.05). Kim et al. (2010) also reported lower food intake in high fat and high cholesterol diet fed groups compared to the CON group.
Table 3.a-cSuperscripts with different letters indicate significant difference (p<0.05).1)CON: control diet fed group.2)HFCD: high fat and high cholesterol diet fed group.3)PY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% plain yogurt powder.4)LFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.5)HFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 5% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.6)FER: food efficacy ratio.7)NS: not significant.
Weights of liver, spleen, kidney, cecum, PAT and EAT in animals are shown in Table 4. Weights of liver in high fat diet fed groups were significantly higher than CON group (p<0.05) possibly because of the existence of the depot fat in liver. There were no significant differences in liver weights in high-fat diet groups, which showed decreasing tendency as fermented pepper juice concentrate in yogurt was increased (p>0.05). Spleen weights in high fat diet fed groups were significantly higher than in the CON group (p<0.05), whereas the weight of the cecum was not significantly different weight among the 5 groups (p>0.05). Kidney weights in the HFCD and LFY groups were significantly higher than the CON group (p<0.05). Weights of PAT and EAT in the HFCD, PY, and LFY groups were significantly higher than the CON group (p<0.05), but HFY group was not (p>0.05). This might bring about the significantly lower body weight in HFY group than HFCD group (p<0.05). Lipid such as high body fat and cholesterols is absorbed to liver and it can cause fatty liver, moreover other hepatic diseases, which are associated with obesity (Tessari et al., 2009). HFY group showed significantly lower body fat (p<0.05), therefore fermented pepper might lower occur of hepatic diseases.
Table 4.a-cSuperscripts with different letters indicate significant difference (p<0.05).1)CON: control diet fed group.2)HFCD: high fat and high cholesterol diet fed group.3)PY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% plain yogurt powder.4)LFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.5)HFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 5% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.6)PAT: perirenal adipose tissue.7)EAT: epididymal adipose tissue.8)NS: not significant.
Amounts of serum glucose, AST, total cholesterol, and HDL cholesterol are expressed in Table 5. Akiyama et al., (1996) reported that feeding a high fat diet to rat increases serum glucose concentration even after a 24 h fasting for 4 wk. However, in this experiment, serum glucose content showed no significant difference (p>0.05). This difference might be resulted from different strain and feeding duration (Wirth-Dzi¸eciołowska et al., 2009). AST exist in almost all organ such as heart, liver, skeletal muscle, and kidney and it would be released to blood, if the organs are damaged (Rappaport, 1993). In this research, AST content in serum was measured, and the high fat diet fed groups were significantly higher than CON group (p<0.05), maybe because of the damage from depot fat in the liver. Total cholesterol concentration in the HFY group was decreased compared to other high-fat diet groups, and it was not significantly different from the CON group (p>0.05). According to reports of Tani et al (Tani et al., 2004) and Srinivasan and Satyanarayana (Srinivasan and Satyanarayana, 1987), total cholesterol level in capsaicin supplemented diet fed group significantly decreased (p<0.05), and cholesterol excretion through fecal showed increasing tendency than control group (Tani et al., 2004). In this study, fermented product such as cleavage of capsaicin might act as a role of capsaicin in report of Tani et al. It means fast lipid metabolism in HFY group than HFCD group. HDL cholesterol amount in the HFCD group was the lowest and showed significantly lower amounts compared to that of the CON group (p<0.05). On the other hand, the PY and LFY groups showed insignificant differences with the CON group (p>0.05).
Table 5.a,bSuperscripts with different letters indicate significant difference (p<0.05).1)CON: control diet fed group.2)HFCD: high fat and high cholesterol diet fed group.3)PY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% plain yogurt powder.4)LFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.5)HFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 5% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.6)GLU: glucose.7)AST: aspartate aminotransferase.8)TC: total cholesterol.9)HDL-C: high density lipoprotein cholesterol.10)NS: not significant.
Amounts of total lipid and total cholesterol in liver are represented in Table 6. The HFCD group showed the highest amount of hepatic total lipid among the 5 groups, significantly (p<0.05). Level of total lipid in the PY, LFY, and HFY groups were decreased significantly compared to the HFCD group (p<0.05). The PY and LFY groups showed no significant differences with the CON group (p>0.05). In total cholesterol, the HFCD and PY groups were significantly higher than the CON group (p<0.05) and the LFY and HFY groups showed decreased levels compared to the HFCD group and had no significant differences with the CON group (p>0.05). This result means that fermented pepper powder might inhibit the formation of cholesterol in liver.
Table 6.a-cSuperscripts with different letters indicate significant difference (p<0.05).1)CON: control diet fed group.2)HFCD: high fat and high cholesterol diet fed group.3)PY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% plain yogurt powder.4)LFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 2% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.5)HFY: high fat and high cholesterol diet supplemented with 5% fermented pepper juice yogurt powder.6)TL: total lipid.7)TC: total cholesterol.
Generally, absorbed capsaicin is metabolized to vanillylamine, and subsequently vanillin, vanillyl alcohol, and vanillic acid (Kawada and Iwai, 1985). These bind with transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) and it secretes catecholamine and stimulates the sympathetic nerve (Iwai and Watanabe, 1999). It results in lipolysis, body heat by energy metabolism, and inhibition of body fat accumulation (Iwai and Watanabe, 1999; Iwasaki et al., 2011).
Fermentation products, such as cleavages of degraded capsaicin, in fermented pepper juice would be transferred and added to yogurt. When it is absorbed, this also would stimulate TRPV1, as capsaicin metabolites, but without pungency.
In this study, fermented pepper juice supplemented yogurt fed group showed anti-obesity, and improvement in lipid metabolism. Therefore, the final fermentation product made from fermented pepper juice might act as an inhibitor of both hypertrophy in organ and accumulation of body fat. It might effect on accumulation of hepatic lipid and high cholesterol in high fat and high cholesterol diet fed rats. Further study would be needed about the fermentation product of pepper and the identification of mechanism.
참고문헌
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