ID | 114416 |
Title Alternative | Effect of high-fat diet on phosphorus absorption
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Author |
Kawamoto, Keisuke
University of Shizuoka
Sakuma, Masae
University of Shizuoka|Sugiyama Jogakuen University
Tanaka, Sarasa
University of Hyogo
Masuda, Masashi
University of Tokushima
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Nakao-Muraoka, Mari
University of Tokushima
Niida, Yuki
University of Tokushima
Nakamatsu, Yurino
University of Shizuoka
Ito, Mikiko
University of Hyogo
Taketani, Yutaka
University of Tokushima
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Arai, Hidekazu
University of Shizuoka
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Keywords | Serum phosphorus levels
Calcium
Dietary fat
Saturated fat
duodenum
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Content Type |
Journal Article
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Description | Objective: Dietary carbohydrate/fat ratio may affect phosphorus metabolism because both calcium and phosphorus are regulated by similar metabolic mechanisms, and a high-fat diet (HF) induces deleterious effects on the absorption of dietary calcium. We hypothesized that the HF induces an increase in phosphorus absorption; therefore, this study aimed to evaluate the effects of differences in the quantity and quality of dietary fat on phosphorus metabolism over the short and long term.
Research Methods & Procedures: Eighteen 8-week-old Sprague-Dawley male rats were fed an isocaloric diet containing varied carbohydrate/fat energy ratio and sources of fat (control diet [Control], HF, and high saturated-fat diet [HF-SFA]). At 3 days and 7 weeks after the allocation and initiation of the test diets, feces and urine were collected and used for phosphorus and calcium measurement. Results: The fecal phosphorous concentration (F-Pi) was lower in the HF-SFA group than in the other two groups; however, the urine phosphorus concentration (U-Pi) was significantly higher in the HF-SFA group than the other two groups when the rats were fed over the short (p<0.01) and long term (p<0.01 vs Control group, p<0.05 vs HF group). There were no significant differences in type-IIa sodium-phosphate cotransporter (NaPi-2a) and type-IIc sodium-phosphate cotransporter (NaPi-2c) mRNA expression, which are renal phosphate transport-related genes; however, the expression of type-IIb sodium-phosphate cotransporter (NaPi-2b) and type-III sodium-phosphate cotransporter (Pit-1) mRNA in the duodenum was higher in the HF and HF-SFA groups than in the Control group (p<0.05), although there were no significant differences in these in the jejunum. Conclusions: Our results indicated that HF, particularly HF-SFA, increases intestinal phosphate absorption compared with Control. |
Journal Title |
Nutrition
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ISSN | 08999007
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NCID | AA10745727
AA11535297
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Publisher | Elsevier
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Volume | 72
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Start Page | 110694
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Published Date | 2019-12-06
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Rights | © 2019. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
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EDB ID | |
DOI (Published Version) | |
URL ( Publisher's Version ) | |
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language |
eng
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TextVersion |
Author
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departments |
Medical Sciences
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