AI Article Synopsis

  • Resveratrol supplementation in mice showed no significant effects on heart rate or body temperature over short and long-term treatments, unlike calorie restriction, which caused notable decreases in these factors.
  • Mice on a calorie-restricted diet experienced immediate decreases in heart rate and body temperature, while resveratrol-treated mice did not show these changes over one week or twelve weeks.
  • Additionally, resveratrol appeared to reduce endurance in treated mice, suggesting differing effects compared to previous studies and indicating the need for more research on how resveratrol functions in relation to metabolic conditions like obesity.

Article Abstract

Dietary supplementation with resveratrol may produce calorie restriction-like effects on metabolic and longevity endpoints in mice. In this study, we sought to determine whether resveratrol treatment elicited other hallmark changes associated with calorie restriction, namely bradycardia and decreased body temperature. We found that during short-term treatment, wild-type mice on a calorie-restricted diet experienced significant decreases in both heart rate and body temperature after only 1 day whereas those receiving resveratrol exhibited no such change after 1 wk. We also used ob/ob mice to study the effects of long-term treatment because previous studies had indicated the therapeutic value of resveratrol against the linked morbidities of obesity and diabetes. After 12 wk, resveratrol treatment had produced no changes in either heart rate or body temperature. Strikingly, and in contrast to previous findings, we found that resveratrol-treated mice had significantly reduced endurance in a treadmill test. Quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction suggested that a proposed target of resveratrol, Sirt1, was activated in resveratrol-treated ob/ob mice. Thus, we conclude that the bradycardia and hypothermia associated with calorie restriction occur through mechanisms unaffected by the actions of resveratrol and that further studies are needed to examine the differential effects of resveratrol in a leptin-deficient background.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2660640PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1096/fj.08-115923DOI Listing

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