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Highly Purified Soybean Protein Is Not Hypocholesterolemic in Rats but Stimulates Cholesterol Synthesis and Excretion and Reduces Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Biosynthesis

Manuscript received 28 May 1997. Initial reviews completed 23 June 1997. Revision accepted 16 March 1998.

Sihem Madani, Stéphanie Lopez, Jean Paul Blond, Josiane Prost, and Jacques Belleville

Unité de Nutrition Cellulaire et Métabolique, Faculté des Sciences Mirande, 21011 Dijon Cedex, France

The specific effects of soybean protein on lipid metabolism were determined with highly purified soybean protein. At 5 wk of age, growing rats were fed diets containing 20% highly purified soybean protein or casein supplemented or not with 0.1% cholesterol for 2 mo. Plasma and liver lipid composition, fecal steroid excretion and several hepatic enzyme activities were measured. There were no significant dietary protein-related differences in plasma and liver cholesterol concentrations. When diets were cholesterol free, highly purified soybean protein stimulated fecal neutral and acidic steroid excretion associated with concomitantly higher hydroxy methylglutaryl CoA (HMG-CoA) reductase activity, but lower cholesterol 7alpha -hydroxylase activity. Soybean protein lowered the linoleate desaturation index [20:4(n-6)/18:2(n-6)] in liver microsomal lipids and phospholipids. This may have been due to the reduced microsomal Delta 6(n-6) desaturase activity in rats fed soybean protein, whereas Delta 5(n-6) desaturase activity did not differ between groups fed the two proteins. Cholesterol supplementation (0.1%) did not affect plasma cholesterol but increased liver cholesterol and triacylglycerol concentrations and reduced HMG-CoA reductase activity; this latter effect was greatest in rats fed soybean protein. Cholesterol 7alpha -hydroxylase activity, however, was diminished only in rats fed casein. Desaturase activities, and particularly Delta 5(n-6) activity, were lowered by cholesterol supplementation in rats fed both protein diets, including a significantly lower 20:4(n-6)/18:2(n-6) ratio in liver microsomal lipids and liver phospholipids. Thus although dietary proteins have no effect on serum cholesterol in rats, they affect enzyme activities involved in cholesterol metabolism and fatty acid desaturation.

Key words: rats, soybean protein, cholesterol metabolism, polyunsaturated fatty acid synthesis bullet  casein.

The Journal of Nutrition Vol. 128 No. 7 July 1998, pp. 1084-1091
Copyright ©1998 by the American Society for Nutritional Sciences




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