Caroline Puel
Institut national de la recherche agronomique
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Publication
Featured researches published by Caroline Puel.
British Journal of Nutrition | 2004
Caroline Puel; A. Quintin; Apostolos Agalias; Jacinthe Mathey; Christiane Obled; Andrzej Mazur; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Patrice Lebecque; Al Skaltsounis; Véronique Coxam
The present study was designed to evaluate the effect of olive oil and its main polyphenol (oleuropein) in ovariectomised rats with or without inflammation. Rats (6 months old) were ovariectomised or sham-operated as control. Ovariectomised rats were separated into three groups receiving different diets for 3 months: a control diet with 25 g peanut oil and 25 g rapeseed oil/kg (OVX), the control diet with 50 g olive oil/kg or the control diet with 0.15 g oleuropein/kg. The sham-operated group was given the same control diet as OVX. Inflammation was induced 3 weeks before the end of the experiment by subcutaneous injections of talc (magnesium silicate) in one-half of each group. The success of ovariectomy was verified at necropsy by the atrophy of uterine horns. Inflammation, oleuropein or olive oil intakes did not have any uterotrophic activity, as they had had no effect on uterus weight. The plasma concentration of alpha-1-acid glycoprotein (an indicator of inflammation) was increased in OVX rats with inflammation. With regard to bone variables, osteopenia in OVX was exacerbated by inflammation, as shown by a decrease in metaphyseal and total femoral mineral density. Both oleuropein and olive oil prevented this bone loss in OVX rats with inflammation. At necropsy, oleuropein and olive oil consumption had had no effect on plasma osteocalcin concentrations (marker of bone formation) or on urinary deoxypyridinoline excretion (marker of bone resorption). In conclusion, oleuropein and olive-oil feeding can prevent inflammation-induced osteopenia in OVX rats.
Calcified Tissue International | 2002
Jacinthe Mathey; M.-N. Horcajada-Molteni; Brigitte Chanteranne; Christel Picherit; Caroline Puel; Patrice Lebecque; C. Cubizoles; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Véronique Coxam; J.-P. Barlet
Some controversy exists in the literature concerning bone mineral densitry (BMD) in obese, diabetic, leptin-resistant Zucker rats. To investigate this question further, we measured body composition and femoral bone mineral density (BMD) (by dual energy X-ray absorptiometry) in 10 male and 10 female 6 month-old Zucker rats and their homozygous lean controls. Fat mass (percent from body weight) was about 3 times higher in fatty rats than in lean controls. Total, diaphyseal, and distal metaphyseal BMD, total femoral Ca content, and femoral failure load were lower in Zucker rats than in controls. Moderate treadmill running (35% - 40% VO2 max, 20-50 minutes day, 6 days/ week, for 89 days) increased BMD in these animals, possibly by inhibiting bone resorption, as evidenced by no change in plasma osteocalcin concentration but decreased urinary deoxypyridinoline excretion in fatty runners.
Calcified Tissue International | 2005
Caroline Puel; A. Quintin; Jacinthe Mathey; Christiane Obled; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Patrice Lebecque; S. Kati-Coulibaly; Marie-Noëlle Horcajada; Véronique Coxam
Aging and sex hormones related changes lead to inflammatory and oxidant conditions, which are involved in the pathogenesis of osteoporosis. Recent studies have suggested that polyphenols may exert a protective effect in such conditions. We assessed the effect of phloridzin (Phlo), a flavonoid exclusively found in apple, on bone metabolism in ovariectomized (OVX) or sham-operated (SH) rats with and without inflammation. Six-month-old Wistar rats were allocated to two equal groups that received either a control diet or a diet supplemented with 0.25% Phlo for 80 days. Three weeks before necropsy, inflammation was induced by subcutaneous injection of talc in 10 animals of each group. At necropsy, ovariectomy decreased both total (T-BMD) and metaphyseal (M-BMD) femoral bone mineral density (P < 0.01). Inflammation conditions, checked by an increase in the spleen weight and α1-acid glycoprotein concentration in OVX rats, exacerbated the decrease in T-BMD (g/cm2) (as well as M-BMD) observed in castrated animals (P < 0.05). Daily Phlo intake prevented ovariectomy-induced bone loss in conditions of inflammation as shown by T-BMD and M-BMD (P < 0.05). At the diaphyseal site, BMD was improved by Phlo in OVX rats with or without inflammation (P < 0.05). These results could be explained by changes in bone remodeling as the increased urinary deoxypyridinoline excretion in OVX and OVXinf animals was prevented by the polyphenol-rich diet (P < 0.001), while plasma osteocalcin concentration was similar in all experimental groups. In conclusion, Phlo consumption may provide protection against ovariectomy-induced osteopenia under inflammation conditions by improving inflammation markers and bone resorption.
Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2008
Caroline Puel; Julie Mardon; Apostolis Agalias; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Patrice Lebecque; André Mazur; Marie-Noëlle Horcajada; Alexios-Leandros Skaltsounis; Véronique Coxam
This study was conducted to determine whether the daily consumption for 84 days of tyrosol and hydroxytyrosol, the main olive oil phenolic compounds, and olive oil mill wastewater (OMWW), a byproduct of olive oil production, rich in micronutrients, may improve bone loss in ovariectomized rats (an experimental model of postmenopausal osteoporosis) and in ovariectomized rats with granulomatosis inflammation (a model set up for senile osteoporosis). As expected, an induced chronic inflammation provoked further bone loss at total, metaphyseal, and diaphyseal sites in ovariectomized rats. Tyrosol and hydroxytyrosol prevented this osteopenia by increasing bone formation ( p < 0.05), probably because of their antioxidant properties. The two doses of OMWW extracts had the same protective effect on bone ( p < 0.05), whereas OMWW did not reverse established osteopenia. In conclusion, polyphenol consumption seems to be an interesting way to prevent bone loss.
British Journal of Nutrition | 2007
Caroline Puel; Julie Mardon; Séraphin Kati-coulibaly; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Patrice Lebecque; Christiane Obled; Edmond Rock; Marie-Noëlle Horcajada; Apostolos Agalias; Leandros Skaltsounis; Véronique Coxam
This study was conducted to determine whether olive fruits, rich in micronutrients, might improve bone loss in ovariectomized (OVX) rats (an experimental model of postmenopausal osteoporosis) and in OVX rats with granulomatosis inflammation (a model of senile osteoporosis). Six-month-old Wistar female rats underwent ovariectomy and were then immediately treated orally by substituting oil in the diet by 10 g/d green Lucques olives or 6 g/d black Lucques olives for each rat for 84 days. OVX rats and sham-operated controls received the same diet with oil. Three weeks before the end of the experiment, subcutaneous inflammation was provoked by injections of sterile magnesium silicate in half the animals in each group. In OVX rats, granulomatosis inflammation, characterized by a rise in inflammatory parameters such as fibrinogen, alpha1-acid glycoprotein, spleen weight and granulocyte level, and an impairment of oxidative status (as shown by a decrease in plasma antioxidant capacity, a higher rate of isoprostane excretion) elicited a bone loss in the whole femur and in the metaphyseal areas considered on their own. Whereas green olives had no effect on osteopenia, consumption of the black variety prevented bone loss in the whole femur and at cortical sites in those oestrogen-deficient animals with talc inflammation (diaphyseal bone mineral density: black olives and inflammation 0-2323 (SE 0.0026) v. ovariectomy and inflammation 0.2117 (SE 0.0030); P=0.027). This bone-sparing effect seemed to result from an improvement in the inflammatory and oxidative status. The present data show that black olives are able to prevent bone loss in an experimental model of senile osteoporosis (oestrogen-deficient rats in which a low-grade inflammation was induced by talc injection).
Annals of Nutrition and Metabolism | 2003
Christel Picherit; Marie-Noëlle Horcajada; Jacinthe Mathey; Brigitte Chanteranne; Caroline Puel; Patrice Lebecque; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Véronique Coxam; J.-P. Barlet
Some controversy exists in the literature concerning the effects of leptin on bone metabolism. Thus we have compared femoral bone density and biochemical markers of bone metabolism in male and female fatty (leptin-resistant) Zucker rats and their lean homozygous controls at 3 and 6 months of age. At 3 months, no differences concerning total, diaphyseal (cortical bone), and distal metaphyseal (trabecular bone) femoral bone densities, plasma osteocalcin concentrations, and urinary deoxypyridinoline excretion were observed between fatty and lean rats. On the opposite, at 6 months of age, in both males and females, total, diaphyseal, and distal metaphyseal femoral bone densities and plasma osteocalcin concentrations were lower in Zucker than in lean rats. Soybean isoflavone consumption (40 µg/g body weight/day for 90 days, a dose which prevents osteopenia following ovariectomy both in lean Zucker homozygous controls and in Wistar rats) by obese female Zucker rats had no significant effect upon their bone mass.
Olives and olive oil in health and disease prevention | 2010
Véronique Coxam; Caroline Puel; Marie-Jeanne Davicco
Publisher Summary Increasing life expectancy is matched by an increase in the prevalence of a number of age-related chronic diseases, including osteoporosis and its associated complications. To prevent this disease, nutritional strategies for optimizing bone health are now being considered, since a dietary approach is more popular amongst osteoporosis sufferers than drug intervention, and long-term drug treatment compliance is relatively poor. Indeed, an increasing body of scientific evidence has demonstrated that compounds derived from food alter the expression of genes in the human body. By turning genes on or off, bioactives in food alter the concentration of specific proteins directly or indirectly associated with human diseases. This may explain why adherence to a Mediterranean-style diet affords protection from degenerative diseases. This diet provides high amounts of olive oil, which is considered as a functional food, and which besides having a high level of MUFA, as oleic acid, contains multiple minor components with biological properties. There is accumulating evidence that antioxidant and anti-inflammatory micronutrients could be beneficial to bone health as well. In this light, olives or olive oil consumption remain sources for putative new and innovative dietary health intervention in the nutritional prevention of osteoporosis.
Clinical Nutrition | 2006
Caroline Puel; Jacinthe Mathey; Apostolis Agalias; Séraphin Kati-coulibaly; Julie Mardon; Christiane Obled; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Patrice Lebecque; Marie-Noëlle Horcajada; Al Skaltsounis; Véronique Coxam
Osteoporosis International | 2007
Jacinthe Mathey; Julie Mardon; N. Fokialakis; Caroline Puel; S. Kati-Coulibaly; S. Mitakou; C. Bennetau-Pelissero; V. Lamothe; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Patrice Lebecque; Marie-Noëlle Horcajada; Véronique Coxam
Calcified Tissue International | 2004
Jacinthe Mathey; Caroline Puel; S. Kati-Coulibaly; C. Bennetau–Pelissero; Marie-Jeanne Davicco; Patrice Lebecque; Marie-Noëlle Horcajada; Véronique Coxam