Brown
Seaweed Holds Promising Weight Loss Benefits
SAN
FRANCISCO, Sept. 11 -- Chemists in Japan have found that brown seaweed,
a flavor component used in many Asian soups and salads, contains
a compound that appears in animal studies to promote weight loss
by reducing the accumulation of fat. Called fucoxanthin, the compound
achieved a 5 percent to 10 percent weight reduction in test animals
and could be developed into a natural extract or drug to help fight
obesity, the researchers say.
The
compound targets abdominal fat, in particular, and may help reduce
oversized guts, the scientists say. Their study was presented today
at the 232nd national meeting of the American Chemical Society.
Fucoxanthin
is a brownish pigment that gives brown seaweed its characteristic
color and also conducts photosynthesis (the conversion of light
to energy). It is found at high levels in several different types
of brown seaweed, including a type of kelp that is used in traditional
Japanese miso soup. But fucoxanthin is not found in abundance in
green and red seaweed, which also are used in many Asian foods,
the researchers say.
The
brown seaweed used in the current study was Undaria pinnatifida,
a type of kelp also known as wakame, which is widely consumed in
Japan. As kelp forests are found in abundance along the California
coast, the new research findings could represent a potentially lucrative
market if kelp -- of which there are many varieties -- can be developed
into effective anti-obesity drugs, according to the scientists.
"I
hope that our study [points to a way to] help reduce obesity in
the U.S. and elsewhere," says study leader Kazuo Miyashita,
Ph.D., a chemistry professor at Hokkaido University in Hokkaido,
Japan. The compound appears to fight fat through two different mechanisms,
he says.
The
study involved more than 200 rats and mice. In obese animals fed
fucoxanthin, the compound appeared to stimulate a protein, UCP1,
that causes fat oxidation and conversion of energy to heat, Miyashita
says. The protein is found in white adipose tissue, the type of
fat that surrounds internal organs. As the abdominal area contains
abundant adipose tissue, the compound might be particularly effective
at shrinking oversized guts, the researcher says. This is the first
time that a natural food component has been shown to reduce fat
by targeting the UCP1 protein, he says.
The
pigment also appeared in animal studies to stimulate the liver to
produce a compound called DHA, a type of omega-3 fatty acid, at
levels comparable to fish oil supplementation. Increased levels
of DHA reduce 'bad cholesterol' (low density lipoprotein), which
is known to contribute to obesity and heart disease. But unlike
fish oil supplements, fucoxanthin doesn't have an unpleasant smell,
Miyashita says. No adverse side effects from fucoxanthin were reported
in the mice and rats used in the study.
But
eating lots of seaweed is not the quickest or most convenient path
to weight loss, Miyashita cautions. He notes that a person would
probably need to eat huge amounts of brown seaweed daily to cause
noticeable weight loss. That's because fucoxanthin is tightly bound
to proteins in the seaweed and is not easily absorbed in the form
of whole seaweed. However, he hopes to extract the most active form
of fucoxanthin from brown seaweed so that it can be developed into
a pill that people can take daily or as needed.
Human
studies are planned, the researcher says, but adds that it may take
three to five years before such an anti-obesity pill is available
to consumers. Until then, people should continue to eat a well-balanced
diet and get plenty of exercise, he says. Funding for the current
study was provided by the Japanese government.
The
American Chemical Society -- the world's largest scientific society
-- is a nonprofit organization chartered by the U.S. Congress and
a global leader in providing access to chemistry-related research
through its multiple databases, peer-reviewed journals and scientific
conferences. Its main offices are in Washington, D.C., and Columbus,
Ohio.
--
Mark T. Sampson
The
paper on this research, AGFD 039, will be presented Monday, Sept.
11, at 8:45 a.m., at the San Francisco Marriott, Nob Hill C, during
the symposium, "Functional Foods and Health."
Kazuo
Miyashita, Ph.D., is a chemistry professor in the Graduate School
of Fisheries Sciences at Hokkaido University in Hokkaido, Japan.
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