Polysaccharides from the Cherry Peel of Coffea arabica L. Attenuate Obesity by Altering Lipid Metabolism and Inflammation and Regulating Gut Microbiota in Mice Fed a High-Fat Diet
Guiqin Hu, Yinghong Gu, Wenyang Zhang, Xiaobin He, Xingzhong Wu, Yufei Jiang, Hong Li, Yu Cao

TL;DR
Polysaccharides from coffee cherry peels reduce obesity and improve gut health in mice on a high-fat diet by altering lipid metabolism and gut microbiota.
Contribution
This study reveals the lipid-lowering and gut microbiota-modulating effects of coffee cherry peel polysaccharides in hyperlipidemic mice.
Findings
CCPP administration improved serum lipid levels and reduced inflammation in high-fat diet-fed mice.
CCPP significantly reduced adipocyte area by 41.3% in high-dose treated mice.
CCPP altered gut microbiota composition, increasing Bacteroidetes and decreasing Bacillota.
Abstract
Long-term excessive fat intake can easily induce metabolic diseases such as fatty liver and hyperlipidemia. As a natural active ingredient, polysaccharides exhibit notable lipid-lowering effects and can serve as effective lipid regulators. Nevertheless, the lipid-lowering effect of Arabica coffee cherry peel polysaccharides (CCPPs) and the underlying regulatory mechanism remain poorly understood. This study isolated polysaccharides from coffee cherry peel, and their functional properties and the lipid-lowering effects and mechanisms on hyperlipidemic mice. In high-fat diet-fed (HFD-fed) mice, CCPP administration had significant regulatory effects on various metabolic parameters. In laboratory mice where hyperlipidemia is induced by a high-fat diet, CCPP administration improved serum lipid levels and demonstrated anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects. These benefits were achieved by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPolysaccharides and Plant Cell Walls · Gut microbiota and health · Microbial Metabolites in Food Biotechnology
