4.6 Article

Evaluation of Anti-Obesity Activity of an Herbal Formulation (F2) in DIO Mice Model and Validation of UPLC-DAD Method for Quality Control

Journal

APPLIED SCIENCES-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/app11167404

Keywords

formulation F2; anti-obesity; diet-induced obesity (DIO); insulin resistance; UPLC-DAD

Funding

  1. Iksan, Jeonbuk, South Korea

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This study demonstrated the potential therapeutic role of herbal formulation F2 in treating obesity using the DIO mice model. F2 showed significant anti-obesity activity by reducing body weight gain, improving serum lipid profile, and decreasing white adipose tissue mass. The study also highlighted the quality control of F2 using the UPLC-DAD method and standardized it with five reference compounds.
Featured Application This research study explored the potential therapeutic role of a herbal formulation F2 in the DIO mice model. The enthusiastic results in DIO mice indicated that F2 has huge potential to develop as a functional food and/or herbal therapy for the treatment of human obesity. The validated UPLC-DAD method would be applicable for the quality control of formulation F2. Obesity is considered a chronic metabolic disorder that can be associated with multiple medical complications. Currently, there is no or limited curative therapy for obesity. This study focused on the assessment of anti-obesity activity and UPLC standardization of a polyherbal formulation (F2). An anti-obesity activity was investigated using the diet-induced obese (DIO) mice model, where obesity was developed in C57BL/6J mice by providing a high-fat diet (HFD) for five weeks without treating drugs. After the successful development of obesity, the obese mice were treated with F2 for seven weeks with continuing HFD feeding. The major obesity-related parameters such as body weight gain, food efficiency ratio, serum lipid profile, and white adipose tissue (WAT) mass were found to be significantly reduced in F2 treated obese mice. These results were supported by the down-regulation of specific adipogenic transcription factors (PPAR gamma, SREBP-1c, and ap2) in epididymal WAT. Histological evaluation of liver and WAT also revealed reduced fat deposition in the tissues by F2 compared to the HFD control group. The overall observations indicated that the F2 exhibited pronounced obesity-controlling activity through the inhibition of adipocyte differentiation and triglyceride accumulation in the tissues, and serum lipid depletion. In addition, F2 ameliorated obesity-induced insulin resistance. Furthermore, the UPLC-DAD method for quality control of F2 was validated and standardized using five reference compounds: astragalin, ellagic acid, fisetin, fustin, and sulfuretin.

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