Plasma Enterostatin: Identification and Release in Rats in Response to a Meal |
| |
Authors: | Jie Mei,Maria S rhede‐Winzell,Charlotte Erlanson‐Albertsson |
| |
Affiliation: | Jie Mei,Maria Sörhede‐Winzell,Charlotte Erlanson‐Albertsson |
| |
Abstract: | Objective: To discover a possible absorption and/or secretion of enterostatin into the circulating blood, as well as to compare the levels of circulating enterostatin after high‐fat feeding and low‐fat feeding. Research Methods and Procedures: Using a specific enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay, plasma enterostatin levels were determined after feeding a high‐fat, a high‐fat/‐sucrose, or a low‐fat meal to Sprague‐Dawley rats deprived of food overnight. Results: The enterostatin levels were increased by all diets; the response to the high‐fat and the high‐fat/‐sucrose meals was greater in magnitude and duration than that to the low‐fat meal. In addition, enterostatin levels correlated with the intake of dietary fat. Plasma enterostatin levels after high‐fat feeding were found to be similar to those after intravenous administration of exogenous enterostatin known to inhibit high‐fat food intake. Gel chromatography of pooled postprandial plasma extracts followed by high‐performance liquid chromatography analysis showed that plasma enterostatin was identical to synthetic enterostatin. Affinity cross‐linking of plasma proteins with 125I‐enterostatin on sodium dodecyl sulfate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, followed by autoradiography, revealed a single band with a molecular weight of about 66 kDa, indicating the presence of a potential enterostatin‐binding protein in plasma. Discussion: The measurements of plasma enterostatin may be a sensitive indicator for the measurement of fat intake. |
| |
Keywords: | procolipase appetite fat intake sucrose enzyme‐linked immunosorbent assay |
|
|