Cholesterol-Lowering Effects of Soy Protein Peptic Hydrolysate with Bound Phospholipids in Rats. Cross-over Test, Dose-Response Test, and Comparison with Materials Possessing Cholesterol-Lowering Effects.

Accession number;99A0772725
Title;Cholesterol-Lowering Effects of Soy Protein Peptic Hydrolysate with Bound Phospholipids in Rats. Cross-over Test, Dose-Response Test, and Comparison with Materials Possessing Cholesterol-Lowering Effects.
Author; MORISHITA KOJI (Kyowahakkokogyo Tsukubaken) YAMAMOTO KAZUHIRO (Kyowahakkokogyo Tsukubaken) HORI GORO (Kyowahakkokogyo Tsukubaken) TANAKA MIHO (Kyowahakkokogyo Tsukubaken) KAMIYA TOSHIKAZU (Kyowahakkokogyo Tsukubaken) NAGAOKA SATOSHI (Gifu Univ., Fac. of Agric.)
Journal Title;Journal of Japanese Society of Nutrition and Food Science
Journal Code:F0624A
ISSN:0287-3516
VOL.52;NO.4;PAGE.183-191(1999)
Figure&Table&Reference;FIG.3, TBL.8, REF.26
Pub. Country;Japan
Language;Japanese
Abstract;Soy protein peptic hydrolysate with bound phospholipids (SPHP) was studied for its cholesterol-lowering effects in 5-week-old male Wistar rats. The crude SPHP (c-SPHP) was prepared by neutral proteolysis of isolated soy protein and lysophospholipid complex, and the SPHP was defined as the high-molecular weight fraction of c-SPHP. The SPHP prevented hypercholesterolemia dose-dependently, and both SPHP and c-SPHP dose-dependently aided recovery from hypercholesterolemia in rats fed a diet containing 0.5% cholesterol for 9 days. The c-SPHP was more effective for recovery from hyperlipidemia and fatty liver in rats compared with partially hydrolyzed sodium alginate, indigestible dextrin, chitosan, and isolated soy protein, which are known to be cholesterol-lowering materials, when added at 5% to a diet containing 0.5% cholesterol. (author abst.)
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