Search results for "sterols"
showing 4 items of 174 documents
Plant sterols from foods in inflammation and risk of cardiovascular disease: a real threat?
2014
High dietary intakes of cholesterol together with sedentary habits have been identified as major contributors to atherosclerosis. The latter has long been considered a cholesterol storage disease; however, today atherosclerosis is considered a more complex disease in which both innate and adaptive immune-inflammatory mechanisms as well as bacteria play a major role, in addition to interactions between the arterial wall and blood components. This scenario has promoted nutritional recommendations to enrich different type of foods with plant sterols (PS) because of their cholesterol-lowering effects. In addition to cholesterol, PS can also be oxidized during food processing or storage, and the…
Involvement of Oxysterols and Lysophosphatidylcholine in the Oxidized LDL–Induced Impairment of Serum Albumin Synthesis by HEPG2 Cells
2000
Abstract —Oxidized low density lipoproteins (Ox-LDLs) are increasingly thought to be a key element in atherogenesis. We have previously reported that serum albumin has important antioxidant properties and that a reduced synthesis of albumin may represent a crucial point in the overall antioxidant defense. In the present work, we aimed at determining whether Ox-LDL could modulate albumin synthesis in cultured human hepatocytes (HepG2 cells). With the use of enzyme immunoassay and radiolabeled leucine incorporation followed by specific immunoprecipitation, Ox-LDL was found to lead to a dose-dependent decrease in albumin secretion. Moreover, the protein synthesis and mRNA levels were decrease…
Wood-derived estrogens: studies in vitro with breast cancer cell lines and in vivo in trout.
1996
The wood-derived compound, beta-sitosterol (purity > 90%), was shown to be estrogenic in fish. It induced the expression of the vitellogenin gene in the liver of juvenile and methyltestosterone-treated rainbow trout. Structural similarities to beta-sitosterol notwithstanding, cholesterol, citrostadienol, beta-sitostanol, and 5-androstene-3 beta,17 beta-diol, an estrogenic member of the androstenic steroid group, were inactive. An abietic acid mixture (37% abietic acid, 6% dehydroabietic acid, and a remainder of unknown compounds) showed slight hormonal activity in feed, but it was completely inactive when given intraperitoneally in implants. The estrogenic component of the abietic acid prep…