Nutrients (Feb 2020)

Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE): A Marker for Personalized Feedback on Dieting

  • Shilpa Tejpal,
  • Narinder Sanghera,
  • Vijayalaxmi Manoharan,
  • Joan Planas-Iglesias,
  • Claire C Bastie,
  • Judith Klein-Seetharaman

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu12030660
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 3
p. 660

Abstract

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Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE) expression and activity is associated with obesity. ACE is a circulating factor that predicts sustained weight loss over a time frame of months. Here, we evaluate whether ACE might also be an early marker (over a 24-hour period) for weight loss. 32 participants (78% females; BMI 28.47 ± 4.87kg/m2) followed a 1200KCal diet with an optional daily (<250KCal) snack and were asked to use an in-house generated health platform to provide recordings of food intake, physical activity and urine collection time and volume. Following a day of dieting, ACE levels in urine negatively correlated with weight loss (p = 0.015 ). This reduction in ACE levels was significantly more robust in individuals with a BMI > 25 (p = 0.0025 ). This study demonstrated that ACE levels correlate with BMI and weight loss as early as after 1 day of dieting, and thus ACE could be a potential early “biofeedback” marker for weight loss and diet efficiency.

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