Mechanisms of weight maintenance under high- and low-protein, low-glycaemic index diets
✍ Scribed by Isabel Rubio-Aliaga; Laure F. Marvin-Guy; Ping Wang; Sandrine Wagniere; Robert Mansourian; Andreas Fuerholz; Wim H. M. Saris; Arne Astrup; Edwin C. M. Mariman; Martin Kussmann
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 215 KB
- Volume
- 55
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1613-4125
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✦ Synopsis
Abstract
Scope: Weight maintenance after intended weight loss is a challenge in an obesogenic environment. In a large multicentre dietary intervention study (DiOGenes), it has recently been demonstrated that a high‐protein/low‐glycaemic index (HP/LGI) diet was slightly more efficient in maintaining weight loss than low‐protein/LGI or high‐GI (LP/LGI or HGI) diets. Here, we use a proteomic approach to assess the molecular mechanisms behind this positive effect.
Methods and results: A subset of the most successful (weight loser, n=12) and unsuccessful (weight re‐gainer, n=12) individuals consuming the LGI diets with either high‐ or low‐protein content (HP or LP/LGI), following an initial calorie deficit run‐in weight loss phase, were analyzed at the plasma protein level. Proteomic analysis revealed 18 proteins regulated after 6 months of the dietary weight maintenance phase. Furthermore, 12 proteins were significantly regulated as a function of success rate under an HP diet, arising as candidate biomarkers of mechanisms of successful weight maintenance under an HP/LGI diet. Pregnancy‐zone protein (PZP) and protein S (PROS1) were revealed as novel biomarkers of weight maintenance showing opposite effects.
Conclusion: Semantic network analysis of the 12 regulated proteins revealed that under an HP/LGI an anti‐atherogenic effect and alterations of fat metabolism were associated with the success of maintaining the initial weight loss.
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