Journal of Functional Foods (Sep 2020)

Consumption of nixtamal from a new variety of hybrid blue maize ameliorates liver oxidative stress and inflammation in a high-fat diet rat model

  • Jesús Miguel Magaña-Cerino,
  • Axel Tiessen,
  • Irma Catalina Soto-Luna,
  • Héctor Arturo Peniche-Pavía,
  • Belinda Vargas-Guerrero,
  • José Alfredo Domínguez-Rosales,
  • Pedro Macedonio García-López,
  • Carmen Magdalena Gurrola-Díaz

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 72
p. 104075

Abstract

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Continuous consumption of functional foods rich in antioxidants leads to several health benefits on non-communicable diseases. Pigmented maize, a traditional Mexican food, contains a high quantity of antioxidants. We determined the phytochemical composition of a raw and alkaline treated (nixtamal) blue hybrid maize (Zea mays L. var. E3E4) and investigated the effect of the nixtamal consumption on the liver oxidative stress and inflammation on rats fed a high-fat diet. We fed Wistar rats for eight weeks with standard diet, HFD, and HFD + Nixtamal. The nixtamalization process modified the chemical profile being cyanidin-3-O-glucoside the main anthocyanin compound (92.19%). Antioxidant capacity by ABTS (IC50 668.70 μg/mL) was increased. Sod1 gene expression and total liver antioxidant capacity were augmented after nixtamal treatment while MDA levels decreased. Histological analysis revealed a statistical reduced liver inflammation. Finally, our data suggest that maize’s anthocyanins counteract directly liver ROS, increasing Sod1, and ameliorate liver damage.

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