Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075560
Title: Bofu-Tsu-Shosan, an Oriental Herbal Medicine, Exerts a Combinatorial Favorable Metabolic Modulation Including Antihypertensive Effect on a Mouse Model of Human Metabolic Disorders with Visceral Obesity
Authors: Azushima K. 
Tamura K.
Wakui H.
Maeda A.
Ohsawa M.
Uneda K.
Kobayashi R.
Kanaoka T.
Dejima T.
Fujikawa T.
Yamashita A.
Toya Y.
Umemura S.
Keywords: adiponectin
bofu tsu shosan
ghrelin
herbaceous agent
low density lipoprotein cholesterol
peroxisome proliferator activated receptor alpha
peroxisome proliferator activated receptor gamma
plasma acylated ghrelin
unclassified drug
uncoupling protein 1
animal experiment
animal model
animal tissue
antihypertensive activity
article
brown adipose tissue
cell size
cholesterol blood level
controlled study
drug mechanism
food intake
gene expression
heart rate
herbal medicine
hypertension
intraabdominal fat
long term care
male
metabolic disorder
mouse
non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus
nonhuman
obesity
protein blood level
rectum temperature
systolic blood pressure
tissues
visceral obesity
weight gain
white adipose tissue
Animals
Blood Pressure
Disease Models, Animal
Drugs, Chinese Herbal
Herbal Medicine
Humans
Ion Channels
Metabolic Diseases
Mice
Mitochondrial Proteins
Obesity, Abdominal
Issue Date: 2013
Publisher: Public Library of Science
Citation: Azushima K., Tamura K., Wakui H., Maeda A., Ohsawa M., Uneda K., Kobayashi R., Kanaoka T., Dejima T., Fujikawa T., Yamashita A., Toya Y., Umemura S. (2013). Bofu-Tsu-Shosan, an Oriental Herbal Medicine, Exerts a Combinatorial Favorable Metabolic Modulation Including Antihypertensive Effect on a Mouse Model of Human Metabolic Disorders with Visceral Obesity. PLoS ONE 8 (10) : e75560. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0075560
Abstract: Accumulating evidence indicates that metabolic dysfunction with visceral obesity is a major medical problem associated with the development of hypertension, type 2 diabetes (T2DM) and dyslipidemia, and ultimately severe cardiovascular and renal disease. Therefore, an effective anti-obesity treatment with a concomitant improvement in metabolic profile is important for the treatment of metabolic dysfunction with visceral obesity. Bofu-tsu-shosan (BOF) is one of oriental herbal medicine and is clinically available to treat obesity in Japan. Although BOF is a candidate as a novel therapeutic strategy to improve metabolic dysfunction with obesity, the mechanism of its beneficial effect is not fully elucidated. Here, we investigated mechanism of therapeutic effects of BOF on KKAy mice, a model of human metabolic disorders with obesity. Chronic treatment of KKAy mice with BOF persistently decreased food intake, body weight gain, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and systolic blood pressure. In addition, both tissue weight and cell size of white adipose tissue (WAT) were decreased, with concomitant increases in the expression of adiponectin and peroxisome proliferator-activated receptors genes in WAT as well as the circulating adiponectin level by BOF treatment. Furthermore, gene expression of uncoupling protein-1, a thermogenesis factor, in brown adipose tissue and rectal temperature were both elevated by BOF. Intriguingly, plasma acylated-ghrelin, an active form of orexigenic hormone, and short-term food intake were significantly decreased by single bolus administration of BOF. These results indicate that BOF exerts a combinatorial favorable metabolic modulation including antihypertensive effect, at least partially, via its beneficial effect on adipose tissue function and its appetite-inhibitory property through suppression on the ghrelin system. © 2013 Azushima et al.
Source Title: PLoS ONE
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/166190
ISSN: 19326203
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0075560
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