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Effect of Dietary Maitake (Grifola frondosa) Mushrooms on Plasma Cholesterol and Hepatic Gene Expression in Cholesterol-Fed Mice

Mayumi SatoForest Products Research Institute, Hokkaido Research OrganizationYoshihiko TokujiDepartment of Food Science, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary MedicineShozo YoneyamaForest Products Research Institute, Hokkaido Research OrganizationKyoko Fujii-AkiyamaDepartment of Food Science, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary MedicineMikio KinoshitaDepartment of Food Science, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary MedicineHideyuki ChijiDepartment of Food Science and Human Nutrition, Faculty of Human Life Sciences, Fuji Women’s UniversityMasao OhnishiDepartment of Food Science, Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine
2013en
ABI

Abstract

To investigate the effects of dietary Grifola frondosa on cholesterol, normal mice were fed a diet containing 1% cholesterol (HC group) or 1% cholesterol and 10% freeze-dried G. frondosa powder (HC+G group) for 4 weeks and hepatic and plasma lipid levels were compared with those of a cholesterol-free diet-fed mice (N group). Hepatic total cholesterol (TC), triacylglycerol contents were considerably increased and plasma TC / phospholipid (PL) was also increased significantly in the HC group compared with the N group. However, plasma TC content decreased in the HC+G group compared with the HC group. To characterize the mechanisms responsible for lowered plasma cholesterol in G. frondosa-supplemented mice, hepatic gene expression was profiled using DNA microarray and gene ontology. Genome analyses revealed that de novo cholesterol synthesis genes were suppressed following cholesterol intake. However, expression of bile acid biosynthesis and low-density lipoprotein receptor genes showed little change. Scarb1, Abcg5, and Abcg8, involved in cholesterol transport and excretion, were slightly upregulated in the HC+G group compared with the HC group. These data indicate the plasma cholesterol-lowering effect of G. frondosa. Moreover, fatty acid (FA) β-oxidation was promoted via adipocytokine signaling pathways, and Saa, encodes serum amyloid A related to arteriosclerosis, was suppressed in the HC+G group.

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