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British Journal of Nutrition 1983-May

Effects of whey protein, casein, soya-bean and sunflower proteins on the serum, tissue and faecal steroids in rats.

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C Sautier
K Dieng
C Flament
C Doucet
J P Suquet
D Lemonnier

Keywords

Abstract

Four groups of rats were fed for 49 d on one of four semi-purified diets, without added cholesterol and containing 230 g/kg of the following isolated proteins: casein, whey, soya-bean or sunflower. Whey, soya-bean and sunflower proteins, when compared with casein, decreased the level of serum high-density-lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol. These low cholesterol levels were accompanied by an increase in the daily faecal excretion of neutral sterols and bile acids in the case of soya-bean protein, and by a decrease in the liver cholesterol content, when rats were fed on whey protein. Considering the amino acid composition of the four purified proteins, we observed that serum total and HDL-cholesterol levels had a significant positive correlation with tyrosine and glutamic acid, and a negative correlation with cystine and alanine. The present study showed that the hypocholesterolaemic effect of dietary proteins was not related to their animal or vegetable origin.

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