Salivary composition in obese vs normal-weight subjects: towards a role in postprandial lipid metabolism?

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TitreSalivary composition in obese vs normal-weight subjects: towards a role in postprandial lipid metabolism?
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuteursVors C., Drai J., Gabert L., Pineau G., Laville M., Vidal H., Guichard E., Michalski M-C, Feron G.
JournalINTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF OBESITY
Volume39
Pagination1425-1428
Date PublishedSEP
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0307-0565
Résumé

In the pathophysiological context of obesity, oral exposure to dietary fat can modulate lipid digestion and absorption, but underlying in-mouth mechanisms have not been clearly identified. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that salivary components related to dietary fat sensitivity would differ according to body mass index (BMI) and postprandial lipid metabolism in young men. Saliva was collected from nine normal-weight (BMI = 22.3 +/- 0.5 kg m(-2)) and nine non-morbid obese (BMI = 31.7 +/- 0.3 kg m(-2)) men before an 8-h postprandial metabolic exploration test involving the consumption of a 40-g fat meal, in which obese subjects revealed a delayed postprandial lipid metabolism. Nine salivary characteristics (flow, protein content, lipolysis, amylase, proteolysis, total antioxidant status, lysozyme, lipocalin 1 and carbonic anhydrase-VI) were investigated. We show that, under fasting conditions, salivary lipolysis was lower in obese vs normal-weight subjects, whereas proteolysis and carbonic anhydrase VI were higher. We reveal through multivariate and Mann-Whitney analysis that differences in fasting salivary lipolysis and proteolysis between both groups are related to differences in postprandial lipid metabolism including exogenous fatty-acid absorption and beta-oxidation. These results suggest a potential role of salivary composition on postprandial lipid metabolism and bring novel causal hypotheses on the links between salivary composition, sensitivity to dietary fat oral income and postprandial lipid metabolism according to BMI.

DOI10.1038/ijo.2015.71