Effect of Shilianhua extract and its fractions on body weight of obese mice.

Jun Yin, Aamir Zuberi, Zhanguo Gao, Dong Liu, Zhijun Liu, William T Cefalu, Jianping Ye
Author Information
  1. Jun Yin: Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University System, Baton Rouge, LA 70808, USA.

Abstract

Five commercial botanical products (Shilianhua [SLH] tablets, Shiu Huo pills, Fenulyn, Bitter Melon, and Glucose Metabolic Support), available in the US market, with reported claims for regulation of metabolism were screened for their effect on body weight gain in high-fat diet-induced obese mice. Pilot results suggested that SLH tablets attenuated body weight gain, whereas Shiu Huo pills and Fenulyn tended to promote weight gain in the mice on the high-fat diet. To investigate the bioactive components in the SLH tablet, the wild SLH plant (Sinocrassula indica Berge) was collected from China and used to make a variety of extracts including aqueous extract, ethanol extract (SLH-E), and subfraction F100. In the study of metabolic activities, the extracts were administrated through food intake by incorporating them into the diet. A rigorous evaluation of the extracts on body weight was conducted in 2 animal models. The aqueous extract and SLH-E were tested in dietary obese mice, while F100 together with SLH-E was tested in KK-Ay mice, a genetic diabetic model. In the 12- to 16-week study, body weight was not significantly altered by the SLH extracts in the 2 animal models. The results suggest that neither the total extract nor the purified components from the SLH plant have a clear effect in the regulation of body weight. The weight reduction observed with the over-the-counter SLH tablet in the pilot studies may be secondary to other components in the tablet, but not from the SLH extract.

References

  1. J Am Diet Assoc. 2005 May;105(5 Suppl 1):S80-6 [PMID: 15867902]
  2. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr. 2007;47(4):389-96 [PMID: 17457723]
  3. Life Sci. 2001 Jul 20;69(9):1029-37 [PMID: 11508645]
  4. Am J Clin Nutr. 1987 Mar;45(3):596-601 [PMID: 2881482]
  5. Yakugaku Zasshi. 2005 Dec;125(12):981-8 [PMID: 16327243]
  6. Life Sci. 2004 Nov 26;76(2):137-49 [PMID: 15519360]
  7. Int J Biol Macromol. 2007 Apr 10;40(5):461-5 [PMID: 17166579]
  8. Mol Endocrinol. 2004 Aug;18(8):2024-34 [PMID: 15143153]
  9. J Am Diet Assoc. 1991 Jul;91(7):816-9 [PMID: 1649210]
  10. Lancet. 1976 Nov 13;2(7994):1086-7 [PMID: 62928]
  11. J Med Food. 2001 Winter;4(4):193-199 [PMID: 12639401]
  12. Diabetes Care. 1995 Apr;18(4):584-5 [PMID: 7497877]
  13. Zhongguo Zhong Yao Za Zhi. 2005 Feb;30(3):211-5 [PMID: 15719643]
  14. Yakugaku Zasshi. 2006 May;126(5):365-71 [PMID: 16679745]

Grants

  1. DK68036/NIDDK NIH HHS
  2. R56 DK068036/NIDDK NIH HHS
  3. P30 DK072476/NIDDK NIH HHS
  4. P50 AT002776-010002/NCCIH NIH HHS
  5. R01 DK068036/NIDDK NIH HHS
  6. P50 AT002776/NCCIH NIH HHS
  7. P50AT002776-01/NCCIH NIH HHS

MeSH Term

Animals
Body Weight
Chemical Fractionation
Diet, Atherogenic
Drug Evaluation, Preclinical
Drugs, Chinese Herbal
Male
Mice
Mice, Inbred C57BL
Obesity
Plant Extracts
Weight Gain

Chemicals

Drugs, Chinese Herbal
Plant Extracts

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0weightSLHbodyextractmiceextractsgainobesecomponentstabletSLH-EShilianhuatabletsShiuHuopillsFenulynregulationeffecthigh-fatresultsdietplantaqueousF100study2animalmodelstestedFivecommercialbotanicalproducts[SLH]BitterMelonGlucoseMetabolicSupportavailableUSmarketreportedclaimsmetabolismscreeneddiet-inducedPilotsuggestedattenuatedwhereastendedpromoteinvestigatebioactivewildSinocrassulaindicaBergecollectedChinausedmakevarietyincludingethanolsubfractionmetabolicactivitiesadministratedfoodintakeincorporatingrigorousevaluationconducteddietarytogetherKK-Aygeneticdiabeticmodel12-16-weeksignificantlyalteredsuggestneithertotalpurifiedclearreductionobservedover-the-counterpilotstudiesmaysecondaryEffectfractions

Similar Articles

Cited By