Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Jan 2011)

Effects of Hesperidin on the Progression of Hypercholesterolemia and Fatty Liver Induced by High-Cholesterol Diet in Rats

  • Xinhui Wang,
  • Junichi Hasegawa,
  • Yoshiyuki Kitamura,
  • Zhongzhi Wang,
  • Akiko Matsuda,
  • Waka Shinoda,
  • Norimasa Miura,
  • Koji Kimura

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 117, no. 3
pp. 129 – 138

Abstract

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Abstract.: The protective effects of hesperidin against hypercholesterolemia and fatty liver were examined in male Wistar rats fed a high-cholesterol diet for 12 weeks. Compared with a standard diet, a high-cholesterol diet not only increased body weights, liver weights, and serum concentration of cholesterol, but also induced the fatty degeneration (steatosis) of liver. Hesperidin (0.08%) reduced levels of hepatic steatosis, adipose tissue and liver weights (P < 0.05), serum total cholesterol and retinol binding protein (RBP) 4 concentrations (P < 0.05) in rats fed with high-cholesterol diet, while reduction in low-density lipoprotein cholesterol levels and triglyceride concentrations was not significant. It also attenuated the marked changes in mRNA expression of lipid metabolism–related proteins: RBP, heart fatty acid–binding protein (H-FABP), and cutaneous fatty acid–binding protein (C-FABP), in liver and adipose tissue. According to the results of gas chromatography, serum concentrations of total cholesterol and biomarkers of cholesterol synthesis (lathosterol) and absorption (campesterol, β-sitosterol) were lower, and concentrations of cholesterol in feces were higher in the rats given hesperidin (P < 0.05). Hesperidin may improve hypercholesterolemia and fatty liver by inhibiting both the synthesis and absorption of cholesterol and regulating the expression of mRNA for RBP, C-FABP, and H-FABP. Keywords:: hypercholesterolemia, hesperidin, fatty liver, lipid metabolism–related gene