Effects of one-week intake of different edible oils on the urinary proteome of rats
Yan Su, Youhe Gao

TL;DR
This study shows that different edible oils affect rat urinary proteins and metabolic pathways in unique ways after just one week of consumption.
Contribution
The study reveals distinct proteomic and pathway-level effects of various edible oils on rats, highlighting their differential biological impacts.
Findings
All edible oil groups showed significant alterations in metabolic pathways with distinct proteomic profiles.
Olive oil and butter groups were enriched in nervous system-related pathways, while rapeseed oil affected immunity-related pathways.
Changes in post-translational modifications were relatively minor compared to proteomic changes.
Abstract
To investigate the effects of different edible oils on the rat body, we analyzed alterations in the urinary proteome and post-translational modifications (PTMs) following a one-week intake of olive oil, butter, lard, hydrogenated vegetable oil, and rapeseed oil. Thirty male Wistar rats (7 weeks old, ~200 g) were randomly allocated into six groups (n = 5 per group). Group A served as the control group, while groups B-F were administered different edible oils. The daily intakes were calculated, respectively, according to the “2015–2020 Dietary Guidelines for Americans” and the “Dietary Guidelines for Chinese Residents.” Urine samples collected after 1 week were analyzed using label-free quantitative proteomics via LC–MS/MS. Differentially expressed proteins and differential post-translational modifications in the urinary proteome were screened for functional analysis. All edible oil…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFatty Acid Research and Health · Cholesterol and Lipid Metabolism · Biochemical Acid Research Studies
