Publications

Wheat Protein Hydrolysate Fortified With l-Arginine Enhances Satiation Induced by the Capsaicinoid Nonivamide in Moderately Overweight Male Subjects

Author(s)
Verena Stoeger, Barbara Lieder, Johanna Riedel, Kerstin Schweiger, Julia Hoi, Veronika Ruzsanyi, Martin Klieber, Petra Rust, Joachim Hans, Jakob P. Ley, Gerhard E. Krammer, Veronika Somoza
Abstract

Scope Increasing the intake of satiety-enhancing food compounds represents a promising strategy for maintaining a healthy body weight. Recently, satiating effects for the capsaicinoid nonivamide have been demonstrated. As various proteins and amino acids have also been demonstrated to decrease energy intake, oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT)-based bolus interventions of 75 g glucose + 0.15 mg nonivamide (NV control) are tested with/without combination of a wheat protein hydrolysate (WPH: 2 g) and/or l-arginine (ARG: 3.2 g) for their satiating effects in 27 moderately overweight male subjects. Methods and Results Compared to NV control intervention, ARG and WPH + ARG treatment both reduce (p <0.01) total calorie intake from a standardized breakfast by -5.9 +/- 4.15% and -6.07 +/- 4.38%, respectively. For the WPH + ARG intervention, increased mean plasma serotonin concentrations (AUC: 350 +/- 218), quantitated by ELISA, and delayed gastric emptying, assessed by C-13-Na-acetate breath test (-2.10 +/- 0.51%, p <0.05), are demonstrated compared to NV control. Correlation analysis between plasma serotonin and gastric emptying reveals a significant association after WPH +/- ARG intervention (r = -0.396, p = 0.045). Conclusion Combination of WPH and ARG enhances the satiating effect of nonivamide, providing opportunities to optimize satiating food formulations by low amounts of the individual food constituents.

Organisation(s)
Department of Physiological Chemistry, Department of Nutritional Sciences
External organisation(s)
Christian Doppler Research Association, Leopold-Franzens-Universität Innsbruck, Symrise AG, Universität Wien
Journal
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research
Volume
63
No. of pages
10
ISSN
1613-4125
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.201900133
Publication date
12-2019
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
303009 Nutritional sciences
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Food Science, Biotechnology
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/wheat-protein-hydrolysate-fortified-with-larginine-enhances-satiation-induced-by-the-capsaicinoid-nonivamide-in-moderately-overweight-male-subjects(fc49f9e9-72f0-4d8a-9382-bad60340f980).html

Projects

Wheat Protein Hydrolysate Fortified With l-Arginine Enhances Satiation Induced by the Capsaicinoid Nonivamide in Moderately Overweight Male Subjects

Author(s)
Verena Stoeger, Barbara Lieder, Johanna Riedel, Kerstin Schweiger, Julia Hoi, Veronika Ruzsanyi, Martin Klieber, Petra Rust, Joachim Hans, Jakob P. Ley, Gerhard E. Krammer, Veronika Somoza
Abstract

Scope Increasing the intake of satiety-enhancing food compounds represents a promising strategy for maintaining a healthy body weight. Recently, satiating effects for the capsaicinoid nonivamide have been demonstrated. As various proteins and amino acids have also been demonstrated to decrease energy intake, oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT)-based bolus interventions of 75 g glucose + 0.15 mg nonivamide (NV control) are tested with/without combination of a wheat protein hydrolysate (WPH: 2 g) and/or l-arginine (ARG: 3.2 g) for their satiating effects in 27 moderately overweight male subjects. Methods and Results Compared to NV control intervention, ARG and WPH + ARG treatment both reduce (p <0.01) total calorie intake from a standardized breakfast by -5.9 +/- 4.15% and -6.07 +/- 4.38%, respectively. For the WPH + ARG intervention, increased mean plasma serotonin concentrations (AUC: 350 +/- 218), quantitated by ELISA, and delayed gastric emptying, assessed by C-13-Na-acetate breath test (-2.10 +/- 0.51%, p <0.05), are demonstrated compared to NV control. Correlation analysis between plasma serotonin and gastric emptying reveals a significant association after WPH +/- ARG intervention (r = -0.396, p = 0.045). Conclusion Combination of WPH and ARG enhances the satiating effect of nonivamide, providing opportunities to optimize satiating food formulations by low amounts of the individual food constituents.

Organisation(s)
Department of Physiological Chemistry, Department of Nutritional Sciences
External organisation(s)
Christian Doppler Research Association, Leopold-Franzens-Universität Innsbruck, Symrise AG, Universität Wien
Journal
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research
Volume
63
No. of pages
10
ISSN
1613-4125
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.201900133
Publication date
12-2019
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
303009 Nutritional sciences
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Food Science, Biotechnology
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/wheat-protein-hydrolysate-fortified-with-larginine-enhances-satiation-induced-by-the-capsaicinoid-nonivamide-in-moderately-overweight-male-subjects(fc49f9e9-72f0-4d8a-9382-bad60340f980).html

Talks

Wheat Protein Hydrolysate Fortified With l-Arginine Enhances Satiation Induced by the Capsaicinoid Nonivamide in Moderately Overweight Male Subjects

Author(s)
Verena Stoeger, Barbara Lieder, Johanna Riedel, Kerstin Schweiger, Julia Hoi, Veronika Ruzsanyi, Martin Klieber, Petra Rust, Joachim Hans, Jakob P. Ley, Gerhard E. Krammer, Veronika Somoza
Abstract

Scope Increasing the intake of satiety-enhancing food compounds represents a promising strategy for maintaining a healthy body weight. Recently, satiating effects for the capsaicinoid nonivamide have been demonstrated. As various proteins and amino acids have also been demonstrated to decrease energy intake, oral glucose tolerance test (oGTT)-based bolus interventions of 75 g glucose + 0.15 mg nonivamide (NV control) are tested with/without combination of a wheat protein hydrolysate (WPH: 2 g) and/or l-arginine (ARG: 3.2 g) for their satiating effects in 27 moderately overweight male subjects. Methods and Results Compared to NV control intervention, ARG and WPH + ARG treatment both reduce (p <0.01) total calorie intake from a standardized breakfast by -5.9 +/- 4.15% and -6.07 +/- 4.38%, respectively. For the WPH + ARG intervention, increased mean plasma serotonin concentrations (AUC: 350 +/- 218), quantitated by ELISA, and delayed gastric emptying, assessed by C-13-Na-acetate breath test (-2.10 +/- 0.51%, p <0.05), are demonstrated compared to NV control. Correlation analysis between plasma serotonin and gastric emptying reveals a significant association after WPH +/- ARG intervention (r = -0.396, p = 0.045). Conclusion Combination of WPH and ARG enhances the satiating effect of nonivamide, providing opportunities to optimize satiating food formulations by low amounts of the individual food constituents.

Organisation(s)
Department of Physiological Chemistry, Department of Nutritional Sciences
External organisation(s)
Christian Doppler Research Association, Leopold-Franzens-Universität Innsbruck, Symrise AG, Universität Wien
Journal
Molecular Nutrition & Food Research
Volume
63
No. of pages
10
ISSN
1613-4125
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/mnfr.201900133
Publication date
12-2019
Peer reviewed
Yes
Austrian Fields of Science 2012
303009 Nutritional sciences
Keywords
ASJC Scopus subject areas
Food Science, Biotechnology
Portal url
https://ucris.univie.ac.at/portal/en/publications/wheat-protein-hydrolysate-fortified-with-larginine-enhances-satiation-induced-by-the-capsaicinoid-nonivamide-in-moderately-overweight-male-subjects(fc49f9e9-72f0-4d8a-9382-bad60340f980).html