|
Dr. Guoyao Wu
This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it
COLLEGE STATION – A Texas AgriLife Research scientist and fellow
researchers have discovered that arginine, an amino acid, reduces fat
mass in diet-induced obese rats and could help fight human obesity.
"Given the current epidemic of obesity in the U.S. and
worldwide, our finding is very important," said Dr. Guoyao Wu, an
AgriLife Research animal nutritionist in College Station and Senior
Faculty Fellow in the department of animal science at Texas A&M
University.
The research found dietary arginine supplementation shifts
nutrient partitioning to promote skeletal-muscle gain, according to the
researchers. The findings were published recently in the Journal of
Nutrition (http://jn.nutrition.org).
In laboratory experiments, rats were fed both low-and high-fat
diets. They found that arginine supplementation for a 12-week period
decreased the body fat gains of low-fat and high-fat fed rats by 65
percent and 63 percent, respectively. The long-term arginine treatment
did not have any adverse effects on either group.
"This finding could be directly translated into fighting human
obesity," Wu said. "At this time, arginine has not been incorporated
into our food (but could in the future)."
Arginine-rich foods include seafood, watermelon juice, nuts,
seeds, algae, meats, rice protein concentrate and soy protein isolate,
he said.
The research suggests that arginine may increase lean tissue
growth. In pigs, it was found that dietary arginine supplementation
reduced fat accretion (growth) but increased muscle gain in
growing/finishing pigs without affecting body weight.
Another important observation according to the research was
that dietary arginine reduced serum concentrations of branched-chain
amino acids.
"This metabolic change is likely beneficial because elevated
concentrations of branched-chain amino acids may lead to insulin
resistance in obesity. Additionally, arginine can stimulate muscle
protein synthesis, a biochemical process that requires large amounts of
energy," Wu said. "Thus, dietary energy would be utilized for lean
tissue rather than fat gain."
Source: Texas A&M AgriLife Communications
Original article: Wenjuan Jobgen, Cynthia J. Meininger, Scott C. Jobgen, Peng Li, Mi-Jeong Lee, Stephen B. Smith, Thomas E. Spencer, Susan K. Fried and Guoyao Wu (2009). Dietary L-Arginine Supplementation Reduces White Fat Gain and Enhances Skeletal Muscle and Brown Fat Masses in Diet-Induced Obese Rats. Journal of Nutrition 139(2): 230-237, Feb 2009.
|