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Dive into the research topics where Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2007

Effects of fructans-containing yacon ( Smallanthus sonchifolius Poepp & Endl.) flour on caecum mucosal morphometry, calcium and magnesium balance, and bone calcium retention in growing rats

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Célia Colli; Eliana Parisi Alvares; Tullia M.C.C. Filisetti

Yacon roots have been considered a functional food due to the high levels of fructans they contains. In the present study, Ca and Mg balance, bone mass and strength, and caecum mucosal morphometry were evaluated. Growing male Wistar rats (n 24) were fed ad libitum control diets or diets supplemented with yacon flour (5 or 7.5 % fructooligosaccharides) for 27 d. Mineral balance was evaluated in three periods of 5 d (starting on the 4th, 10th and 16th days). After the rats were killled, the bones were removed and bone mineral density was measured. Ca analyses were performed on left femurs and tibias and biomechanical testing on right femurs. The caecum was removed and tissue samples were collected for histological analysis. Caecal histology changed noticeably in rats fed yacon flour: there was an increase in the depth and number of total and bifurcated crypts as well. Yacon flour consumption significantly (P < 0.05) resulted in a positive Ca and Mg balance, leading to higher values of bone mineral retention and biomechanical properties (peak load and stiffness) when compared to the control group. The positive effects on mineral intestinal absorption, bone mass and biomechanical properties showed an important role of yacon roots in the maintenance of healthy bones. The increased number of bifurcating crypts might be related to the higher mineral absorption caused by the enlargement of the absorbing surface in the large intestine of the animals.


Nutrition | 2009

Effects of dietary lipid composition and inulin-type fructans on mineral bioavailability in growing rats

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Jorge Mancini Filho; Eliana Parisi Alvares; Maria Lucia Cocato; Célia Colli

OBJECTIVE This study reports the effects of feeding with a combination of inulin-type fructans (ITF) and fish oil (FO) on mineral absorption and bioavailability as part of a semipurified diet offered to rats. METHODS Male Wistar rats (n = 24) were fed a 15% lipid diet (soybean oil [SO] or a 1:0.3 fish:soybean oil mixture [FSO]) and diets containing the same sources of lipids supplemented with 10% ITF (Raftilose Synergy 1) ad libitum for 15 d. Feces and urine were collected for mineral analyses during the last 5 d of the test period. Fatty acid composition was determined in liver and cecal mucosa homogenates. Liver and bone mineral analyses were performed by atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Bone biomechanical analyses were evaluated by a 3-point bending test. RESULTS Compared with the controls, ITF-fed rats had enlarged ceca and a significant decrease in cecal content pH (P < 0.001). The apparent mineral absorption was improved in these rats, and this effect was enhanced by dietary combination with FO for all minerals except for magnesium. Addition of ITF to the diet resulted in higher bone mineral content (calcium and zinc) and bone strength, but increased bone mineral content was only statistically significant in FO-fed animals. A decrease in liver iron stores (P = 0.015) was observed in rats fed FO, considering that ITF consumption returned to levels comparable to the SO control group. CONCLUSION These findings confirm the positive influence of ITF on mineral bioavailability, which was potentiated by addition of FO to the diet.


Revista De Nutricao-brazilian Journal of Nutrition | 2003

Amido resistente e suas propriedades físico-químicas

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Glória Maria de Lemos Silva

A partir da decada de 80, comecou a ser observado que uma fracao do amido escapava da digestao nointestino delgado e chegava ao colon, onde servia de substrato para a flora bacteriana. Essa fracao foidenominada amido resistente e, a partir de entao, constatou-se que determinados efeitos fisiologicos,inicialmente atribuidos as fibras alimentares, poderiam tambem ser atribuidos ao amido resistente. Variosfatores podem estar envolvidos na sua formacao e eles, por sua vez, afetam a sua resposta fisiologica. Destemodo, torna-se importante o conhecimento dos aspectos fisico-quimicos envolvidos na formacao do amidoresistente.


Nutrition Research | 2009

Changes in bone mass, biomechanical properties, and microarchitecture of calcium- and iron-deficient rats fed diets supplemented with inulin-type fructans

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Maria Lucia Cocato; Vanda Jorgetti; Lílian R. M. de Sá; Eduardo Yoshio Nakano; Célia Colli

Feeding mineral-deficient diets enhances absorptive efficiency as an attempt of the body to compensate for the lack of an essential nutrient. Under certain circumstances, it does not succeed; and nutritional deficiency is produced. Our hypothesis was that inulin-type fructans (ITF), which are known to affect mineral absorption, could increase Ca and Fe bioavailability in Ca- and Fe-deficient rats. Male Wistar rats (n = 48, 4 weeks old) were assigned to 1 of 8 groups derived from 2 x 2 x 2 factorial design with 2 levels of added Fe (0 and 35 mg/kg), Ca (0 and 5 g/kg), and ITF (0 and 100 g/kg) for 33 days. The Fe status (hemoglobin, serum Fe, total Fe-binding capacity, transferrin saturation, liver minerals) was evaluated. Tibia minerals (Ca, Mg, and Zn), bone strength, and histomorphometry were determined. In nondeficient rats, ITF supplementation did not affect Fe status or organ minerals, with the exception of tibia Mg. Moreover, ITF improved bone resilience and led to a reduction in eroded surface per body surface and number of osteoclasts per area. In Ca-deficient rats, ITF increased liver (Fe and Zn) and tibia (Zn) mineral levels but impaired tibia Mg, yield load, and resilience. In conclusion, ITF worsened the tibia Mg levels and elastic properties when supplemented in Ca-deficient diets. In contrast, although bone Ca was not affected in nondeficient rats under the present experimental conditions, bone quality improved, as demonstrated by a moderate reduction in femur osteoclast resorption and significant increases in tibia Mg content and elasticity.


British Journal of Nutrition | 2014

Fructo-oligosaccharides and iron bioavailability in anaemic rats: the effects on iron species distribution, ferroportin-1 expression, crypt bifurcation and crypt cell proliferation in the caecum.

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Eduardo H. S. Gaievski; Eduardo De Carli; Eliana Parisi Alvares; Célia Colli

The present study investigated the effects of fructo-oligosaccharides (FOS) on the bioavailability of Fe from ferric pyrophosphate (FP), a water-insoluble compound, in Fe-deficient anaemic rats that were subjected to a Hb repletion assay. Male Wistar rats (n 64) were fed adequate or low (8 mg/kg) Fe diets for 15 d followed by 1 or 2 weeks of Fe repletion with diets providing 35 mg Fe/kg as ferrous sulphate (FS), FP or FP that was mixed with 7·5% FOS in the form of yacon flour or Raftilose P95 (RAF), a purified source of FOS. The effects of FOS were observed within the 1st week of the repletion period. Fe bioavailability was improved by FOS supplementation, as measured by Hb regeneration efficiency and hepatic Fe stores, which were more pronounced in the RAF group. Moreover, RAF supplementation resulted in a higher biological value relative to that of the FP group. FOS supplementation resulted in caecal enlargement, in addition to acidification and Fe species redistribution in the caecal contents relative to the control rats. These effects occurred concomitantly with decreased ferroportin (FPN)-1 expression in the caecal mucosa, which was similar in magnitude to that observed in the FS group. Caecum mucosal morphometry was influenced by FOS supplementation, whereas crypt fission and cell proliferation were highest in the caecum of the RAF group. These results reinforce the effects of FOS as Fe bioavailability enhancers in anaemic rats that are sustained by early changes in their caecal environment (decreased mucosal FPN-1 expression and increased Fe absorbability, crypt fission and cellularity).


Revista De Nutricao-brazilian Journal of Nutrition | 2011

Prebióticos y su efecto en la biod sponibilidad del calcio

Ivana Lavanda; Susana Marta Isay Saad; Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Célia Colli

En la busqueda de medidas de prevencion de enfermedades cronicas no trasmisibles, se piensa en los prebioticoscomo una forma efectiva, saludable y relativamente barata para la optimizacion de la absorcion de Ca. Elaumento de la expectativa de vida de la poblacion y el incremento de enfermedades como la osteoporosistraen graves consecuencias a la salud del individuo, acarreando importantes desembolsos economicos. En estarevision se condensa el conocimiento presente sobre el efecto fisiologico del consumo de carbohidratosprebioticos y su posible interferencia en la biodisponibilidad del Ca, como tambien las posibilidades de suempleo en estrategias para combatir las deficiencias del mineral. Se elaboro una recopilacion de los estudiosoriginales realizados con mayor impacto en el tema, dando preferencia a los publicados en los ultimos 6 anos.Utilizamos las bases de datos


Journal of Nutritional Science and Vitaminology | 2014

Dietary Iron Overload: Short- and Long-Term Effects on Cecal Morphometry in Growing Rats

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Maria Lucia Cocato; Lilian Rose Marques De Sá; Célia Colli

In animal models, Fe overload is associated with organ oxidative stress and tissue injury. In this context, luminal Fe may affect the mucosal barrier and function or generate a pathological milieu in the intestine that triggers epithelial cell stress. Here, we hypothesized that increased liver Fe levels resulting from dietary Fe overload may be associated with architectural changes in the cecal mucosa. Weanling male Wistar rats (n=7-10/group) were fed diets (modified from AIN-93G) containing adequate or supplemental Fe (approximately 10 times the recommended levels) for 4 and 12 wk. At euthanasia, the blood Hb was determined, and Fe analyses were performed in stool and liver samples using atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Cecal tissue was collected for histological and morphometric analysis. No significant differences were observed in the blood Hb or Hb Fe pool between groups in either period. Iron overload led to a higher fecal Fe excretion, whereas the liver Fe was increased only after 12 wk when compared with controls. After 4 wk, the consumption of Fe-overloaded diets resulted in changes in the mucosal architecture of the cecum, which were intensified after 12 wk. At this time, these changes were significantly correlated with the hepatic Fe content. These findings suggest that changes in the cecal mucosa may have occurred as a result of oxidative stress caused by excessive amounts of Fe in the intestinal lumen. The consequences of these effects on the intestinal absorption and its implications for liver Fe homeostasis should be considered in future studies.


Nutrition Research | 2006

Fructooligosaccharides improve bone mass and biomechanical properties in rats

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Célia Colli; Tullia M.C.C. Filisetti


Food Chemistry | 2011

Iron bioavailability from ferric pyrophosphate in rats fed with fructan-containing yacon (Smallanthus sonchifolius) flour

Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Maria Lucia Cocato; Primavera Borelli; Eduardo H. S. Gaievski; Amanda R. Crisma; Karina Nakajima; Eduardo Yoshio Nakano; Célia Colli


Lwt - Food Science and Technology | 2013

Nutrition claims for functional guava mousses produced with milk fat substitution by inulin and/or whey protein concentrate based on heterogeneous food legislations

Tiemy R. Komatsu; Flávia C.A. Buriti; Roberta Claro da Silva; Alexandre Rodrigues Lobo; Célia Colli; Luiz Antonio Gioielli; Susana Marta Isay Saad

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Célia Colli

University of São Paulo

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