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Carnosine supplementation improves serum resistin concentrations in overweight or obese otherwise healthy adults: A pilot randomized trial

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 08:11 authored by Estifanos Baye, Jozef Ukropec, Maximilian de Courten, Aya Mousa, Timea Kurdiova, Josphin Johnson, Kirsty Wilson, Magdalena PlebanskiMagdalena Plebanski, Giancarlo Aldini, Barbara Ukropcova, Barbora de CourtenBarbora de Courten
Adipokines play an important role in the regulation of glucose metabolism. We have previously shown that carnosine supplementation in overweight or obese non-diabetic individuals improves glucose metabolism but does not change adiponectin concentrations. However, its effect on other adipokines has not been investigated. Herein we further determined the effect of carnosine supplementation on serum adipsin, resistin and leptin. Twenty-two overweight or obese otherwise healthy adults were randomly assigned to receive either 2 g of carnosine (n = 13) or identically looking placebo (n = 9) for 12 weeks. Serum adipsin, leptin and resistin were analyzed using a bead-based multiplex assay. Carnosine supplementation decreased serum resistin concentrations compared to placebo (mean change from baseline: -35 ± 83 carnosine vs. 35 ± 55 ng/mL placebo, p = 0.04). There was a trend for a reduction in serum leptin concentrations after carnosine supplementation (-76 ± 165 ng/mL carnosine vs. 20 ± 28 ng/mL placebo, p = 0.06). The changes in leptin and resistin concentrations were inversely related to the change in concentration for urinary carnosine (r = -0.72, p = 0.0002; r = -0.67, p = 0.0009, respectively), carnosine-propanal (r = -0.56, p = 0.005; r = -0.63, p = 0.001, respectively) and carnosine-propanol (r = -0.61, p = 0.002; r = -0.60, p = 0.002, respectively). There were no differences between groups in change in adipsin concentrations. Our findings show carnosine supplementation may normalize some, but not all, of the serum adipokine concentrations involved in glucose metabolism, in overweight and obese individuals. Further clinical trials with larger samples are needed to confirm these results.

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Related Materials

  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.3390/nu10091258
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 20726643

Journal

Nutrients

Volume

10

Number

1258

Issue

9

Start page

1

End page

10

Total pages

10

Publisher

MDPIAG

Place published

Switzerland

Language

English

Copyright

© 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

Former Identifier

2006087991

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-03-26

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