Journal
JOURNAL OF FUNCTIONAL FOODS
Volume 100, Issue -, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jff.2022.105375
Keywords
Dairy products; Alpha-tocopherol; Serum proteins; Proteomics; Lipid metabolism; Type 2 diabetes
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This study aims to investigate the relationship between high α-tocopherol levels and serum protein profiles during intake of adequate or high dairy products. The results show that α-tocopherol levels are positively correlated with proteins involved in lipid metabolism. However, this correlation changes after high dairy product intake.
Increasing dairy fat intake is expected to improve alpha-tocopherol bioavailability and could be beneficial for improving T2D risk factors. The aim of this study is to investigate the relationship between alpha-tocopherol levels and serum protein profiles before and after intake of adequate dairy (AD) or high dairy (HD) products in hyperinsulinemia patients. In this crossover study, dietary intake of 25 subjects with hyperinsulinemia (54 +/- 14 yrs and BMI 31 +/- 3) included: 1-pre-AD intake; 2-pre-HD intake; 3- post-AD intake (<= 2 servings/day); and 4 -post-HD intake (>= 4 servings/day) assessed by food frequency questionnaire. In pre-AD, post-AD and pre-HD, alpha-tocopherol positively correlated with proteins mainly involved in lipid metabolism (rho > 0.40; P < 0.05). In contrast, alpha-tocopherol did not correlate with these biological processes in post-HD. Thus, these findings indicate that alpha-tocopherol levels are associated with serum proteins that regulate lipid homeostasis. However, the increase intake of dairy products modified these associations in hyperinsulinemia subjects.
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