The worldwide epidemic of obesity and related health problems including diabetes demands profound measures to help overweight and obese people to reduce their weight and maintain a healthier reduced weight(Reference Flegal, Carroll and Ogden1, 2). Compared with weight loss, weight maintenance after weight loss requires a continuous long-term effort to battle weight regain that commonly occurs(Reference Wing and Phelan3). Medical treatments, physical activity, and also dietary intervention have been shown to be capable of improving the success rate of weight maintenance(Reference Turk, Yang and Hravnak4). Manipulating the macronutrient content, particularly by increasing the protein content, has shown some benefit on preventing weight regain(Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Nieuwenhuizen and Tome5). In addition, a low-glycaemic index (GI) diet may favour a healthy metabolic profile(Reference Du, Van der and Feskens6).
The Diogenes programme is a pan-European project targeting the obesity problem by dietary intervention. In this programme, the relative efficacy of four different diets with variation in protein:carbohydrate ratio and GI level was investigated with respect to weight-loss maintenance in European families with overweight and obese parents(Reference Moore, Lindroos and Kreutzer7, Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak8). It showed that both a modestly higher protein content and a modest reduction in GI in the context of an ad libitum diet improve weight-loss maintenance(Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak9).
To understand the biological processes underlying the physiological outcome of weight maintenance on different diets, a systematic profiling of the body is useful. Since the ongoing physiological activities of all tissues are reflected in it, blood is an important source for discovering biomarkers(Reference Liotta, Ferrari and Petricoin10). Here, we investigated thirty-two proteins and steroid hormones in the blood of women who participated in the Diogenes dietary intervention study. The profiling of these targeted adipokines, cytokines, inflammation markers, vascular factors, satiety hormones, sex hormones and other metabolic hormones, in a search for their relationship with weight regain or weight loss during intended weight maintenance, and their relationship with dietary protein and GI levels, helps to get an insight into the differences in weight maintenance when manipulating dietary protein and GI intake.
Subjects and methods
Subjects and study design
The participants were part of the pan-European, multicentre, randomised and controlled dietary intervention study Diogenes (http://www.diogenes-eu.org, ClinicalTrials.gov registration no.: NCT00390637). The design and dietary intervention have been described in detail previously(Reference Moore, Lindroos and Kreutzer7–Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak9). The study was conducted according to the guidelines laid down in the Declaration of Helsinki and all procedures involving human subjects were approved by the local ethical committees in the respective countries: (1) Medical Ethics Committee of the University Hospital Maastricht and Maastricht University, The Netherlands; (2) The Committees on Biomedical Research Ethics for the Capital region of Denmark, Denmark; (3) Suffolk Local Research Ethics Committee, UK; (4) University of Crete Ethics Committee, Greece; (5) the Ethics Commission of the University of Potsdam; (6) Research Ethics Committee at the University of Navarra, Spain; (7) Ethical Committee of the Institute of Endocrinology, Czech Republic; (8) Ethical Committee to the National Transport Multiprofile Hospital in Sofia, Bulgaria. Written informed consent was obtained from all subjects.
In brief, the study was composed of two phases: a weight-loss phase and a weight-maintenance phase with dietary intervention. Overweight or obese but otherwise healthy subjects followed an 8-week, low-energy diet with about 3·3–4·2 MJ/d. Those who achieved ≥ 8 % loss of initial body weight were in a 2 × 2 factorial design randomised to one of the following four moderate-fat ad libitum diets or a control diet for 6-month weight maintenance with dietary counselling every 2–4 weeks(Reference Moore, Lindroos and Kreutzer7): diet 1, low protein (LP) and low GI (LGI) (LP/LGI); diet 2, LP and high GI (HGI) (LP/HGI); diet 3, high protein (HP) and LGI (HP/LGI); diet 4, HP and HGI (HP/HGI). Participants were advised to maintain their weight loss during this phase, but there were no restrictions with respect to further weight reduction.
The anthropometrical and physiological parameters were measured on clinical investigation day (CID) 1 before weight loss, CID2 after weight loss and CID3 after weight maintenance. The subjects were not given a standard diet the day before CID, but were asked not to consume any food or liquids except for 350–500 ml water at least 10 h before the investigation. The majority of the participants had their fat mass measured by dual-emission X-ray absorptiometry scan or bioelectrical impedance analysis. Blood, urine and fat biopsy samples were collected at each centre using the same standardised protocols(Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak8). For the present study, EDTA plasma and serum samples in the fasting state were divided into aliquots and kept at − 80°C during storage and transportation. In addition, serum glucose, TAG, cholesterols, dietary intake based on food diaries, and urinary analysis of 24 h N excretion to assess adherence to the diet were measured as described previously(Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak8, Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak9).
The sample size estimation of the complete Diogenes study has been described previously(Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak9). As in previous studies(Reference Wang, Holst and Andersen11, Reference Marquez-Quinones, Mutch and Debard12), to avoid biological variation caused by ethnicity and sex, we focused on Caucasian female participants, who were below 50 years of age, non-diabetic and non-dyslipidaemic, taking one of the four intervention diets (selection criteria shown in Fig. 1). Considering facility capacity and assay cost, based on a ‘weight-maintenance score’ we selected ninety-six subjects in total, which is about half of the eligible subjects after removing extremes with the lowest and highest 10th percentile of the score from each diet group, which might have an overwhelming effect by their large body-weight change on other biological processes. From each dietary group, twelve subjects with relatively the highest weight reduction during the 6-month maintenance period (continued weight losers (WL)) and twelve subjects with relatively the highest weight regain in that period (weight regainers (WR)) were studied (Fig. 1).
A power calculation showed that assuming a standard deviation of 50 % of the mean value of the variable, if such a ninety-six-subject design would enter three-way ANOVA, the power would be 0·80 to detect a main-effect difference at a two-sided 0·05 significance level, when the true difference between the groups is 29 %. For the two-factor interaction, the power would be 0·80, when the difference is 50 %. For the three-factor interaction, the power would be 0·80, when the difference is 81 %.
Measurement of targeted blood factors
The selection of blood analytes as targets is described in the supplementary material (available online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn). All the samples were blinded and randomly allocated with respect to dietary intervention and weight change before transport to the laboratories for analysis. The majority of the analytes were analysed in plasma, unless otherwise stated, by two multiplex biomarker testing laboratories with Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments certification: Rules-Based Medicine (Austin, TX, USA), applying their Human Metabolic Map version 1.0 (http://www.rulesbasedmedicine.com/products-services/human-metabolic.asp), and SearchLight (Aushon BioSystems, Woburn, MA, USA), applying a customised multiplex immunoassay. The remaining analytes were analysed in-house, as in the previous study(Reference Wang, Holst and Andersen11).
Data analysis
Analytes by multiplex assays were excluded if more than half of the samples were not measurable on the standard curve or with high variation in controls. The final list of included analytes is shown in Table 1. The values of insulin-like growth factor 1 of 16 % of the samples and the values of growth hormone (GH) of 6 % of the samples, which were flagged as being below the detection limit, were imputed with a value of half of the lowest detected concentration. The data of plasma insulin (INS) measured by Rules-Based Medicine were calibrated using INS data from a subset of serum samples as described previously(Reference Wang, Holst and Andersen11). Furthermore, outliers defined as a data point out of the mean ± 4 sd range were removed for each analyte.
* Analysed in serum. Others in plasma.
The anthropometrical and physiological parameters that were all normally distributed are expressed as means and standard deviations. The fold changes during weight loss and maintenance were evaluated by the ratio of the values in CID2:CID1 and CID3:CID2, respectively. For blood analytes, the natural logarithm-transformed concentration and fold changes were used for analyses.
Univariate data analysis was done with SPSS version 15.0 (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL, USA). Mean dietary intakes were compared by the t test. For anthropometrical and physiological parameters, the difference between the WL and WR groups in CID1, CID2 and the CID2:CID1 ratio were analysed by the t test. The differences in the fold change during the weight-maintenance period were analysed by one-way ANOVA with respect to weight loss or regain, with the CID2:CID1 ratio as a covariate. The effects of dietary protein and GI on the changes in body weight and body fat were analysed by two-way ANOVA with the CID2:CID1 ratio as a covariate in the WL and WR groups separately.
The relationship between the fold changes in blood analytes during weight loss and weight maintenance was evaluated by Pearson's correlation. The fold changes in blood analytes during the maintenance period were analysed in a multi-way ANOVA using the outcome of maintenance (WL or WR), dietary protein (low and high), and dietary GI (low and high) as fixed factors, and with or without age, weight CID2:CID1 ratio and the CID2:CID1 ratio of the analyte as covariates. The P values were further controlled for false discovery rate in multiple testing with the Benjamini–Hochberg method(Reference Benjamini and Hochberg13) using the ‘stats’ package in R (version 2.10.1; http://www.r-project.org/)(14). The fixed factor in multi-way ANOVA with a P < 0·03, equivalent to multiple testing q < 0·25, was taken as significant. In other cases, a two-side P < 0·05 was taken as significant.
To explore the relationships between the fold changes in anthropometry, physical parameters and biochemical analytes during the weight-maintenance phase, we used multivariate data analysis with the software GeneMaths XT version 2.12 (Applied Maths, Sint-Martens-Latem, Belgium). Supervised discriminant principal component analysis was applied to the fold changes in all anthropometrical and physiological parameters, and measured blood proteins and steroids, on participants nested in eight maintenance and diet groups. The missing values were first imputed by the K nearest-neighbours method within the program. Grouped subjects with LP or HP, and LGI or HGI were also shown in the principal component analysis score plot as group profiles. A variable with a loading score >2 or a geometric mean of the loading score on all components >3 was taken as an important contributor.
Results
Subjects' characteristics
From the Diogenes dietary intervention study, ninety-six overweight/obese but otherwise healthy women (age 29–49 years), who had the most pronounced (but not extreme) WL or WR after weight loss according to the weight-maintenance score, were selected evenly from four dietary groups. In the pooled subjects, the WL and WR groups did not differ with regard to anthropometrical and physiological characters at baseline (CID1) nor after weight loss (CID2), and only showed a trend (P = 0·057) for younger age in the WL group compared with the WR group (Table 2). During the weight-loss phase, only the fold change in weight was different, although borderline, between the WL (0·89 (sd 0·03)) and WR groups (0·90 (sd 0·02) (P = 0·021).
LP, low protein; LGI, low glycaemic index; HGI, high glycaemic index; HP, high protein; WL, continued weight losers; WR, weight regainers; HOMA-IR, homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance.
* Values are from the fasting state.
† Calculated as fasting glucose (mmol/l) × fasting insulin (μIU/ml)/22·5.
‡ 1 μIU/ml = 6·945 pmol/l.
As expected from the selection, during the 6-month maintenance phase, all subjects of the WL group lost weight (3·3 (sd 2·2) kg), while all WR subjects gained weight (3·9 (sd 1·2) kg). They were different in the CID3:CID2 ratio of all measured adiposity indices (P < 0·001). In addition, WL subjects had less increase in diastolic blood pressure (P = 0·035), cholesterol (P = 0·044), TAG (P = 0·037) and glucose (P = 0·045).
Post-intervention dietary intakes are presented in Table 3. From the dietary recall of about three-quarters of the cohort who had available food records, there was a modest difference in dietary protein (2·9 % energy (%E)) and GI (3·5 units) between the LP and HP groups and between the LGI and HGI groups, respectively. Those differences were also detectable in the WL and WR groups, with the exception of protein intake between the HP and LP subjects in the WL group. These differences were confirmed by the urinary N excretion as a marker of adherence to a HP or LP diet (Table 3).
LP, low protein; HP, high protein; GI, glycaemic index; LGI, low glycaemic index, HGI, high glycaemic index.
* The group difference was analysed by the t test.
† Values were significantly different (P < 0·05).
Further analysis showed that among the pooled subjects, no dietary effect could be detected on the fold change in either body weight or fat mass percentage (P>0·5). However, in the WL group, HP intake and LGI were associated with more weight loss (P = 0·014 and 0·012, respectively). In the WR group, HP intake was associated with less weight regain (P = 0·001), whereas GI had no effect (P = 0·7). But for fat mass, no significant dietary effect in both groups could be detected (P>0·5).
Blood protein and steroid changes during weight loss and maintenance
At baseline, after weight loss and after the weight-maintenance period, twenty-nine blood proteins and three steroids were measured (Fig. 2). They were grouped into seven categories based on their functions. Cortisol was listed as an extra category. Except for angiotensinogen (AGT), acylation-stimulating protein and GH, twenty-nine out of thirty-two analytes showed that their changes during weight maintenance were negatively correlated with the changes during weight loss in the pooled subjects (Table 4), suggesting a ‘return-back’ effect of the body to keep the homeostasis as it was before the weight loss. Especially, the immunoproteins macrophage migration inhibiting factor, C-reactive protein (CRP), haptoglobin and matrix metalloproteinase 9, the sex hormones follicle-stimulating hormone and luteinising hormone (LH), and the growth factors vascular endothelial growth factor-D and insulin-like growth factor binding protein 1 (IGFBP1) strongly showed this effect, with r>0·5 and P < 0·001. Interestingly, WL and WR subjects showed differences in this return-back effect for some analytes. Leptin (LEP) and pancreatic polypeptide showed this effect significantly more profoundly in the WR group, and GH and TNF-α also had this trend. On the other hand, IL-6 was affected in the WL group, but not in WR subjects.
WL, continued weight losers; WR, weight regainers; COR, cortisol; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone; LH, luteinising hormone; PRO, progesterone; TES, testosterone; PRL, prolactin; ACE, angiotensin I converting enzyme 1; AGT, angiotensinogen; PAI1, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, active; LEP, leptin; RBP4, retinol-binding protein 4; ADIPOQ, adiponectin; RETN, resistin; ASP, acylation-stimulating protein; INS, insulin; IAPP, islet amyloid polypeptide, amylin, total; GCG, glucagons; CRP, C-reactive protein; HPT, haptoglobin; MIF, macrophage migration inhibiting factor; MMP9, matrix metallopeptidase 9; GH, growth hormone; IGF1, insulin-like growth factor 1; VEGFD, vascular endothelial growth factor-D; PEDF, pigment epithelium-derived factor; IGFBP3, Insulin-like growth factor binding protein 3; GLP1, glucagon-like peptide-1, total; PP, pancreatic polypeptide.
* Pearson's correlation analysis on ln after 8-week weight loss (CID2):baseline, before weight loss (CID1) v. ln after 6-month weight maintenance:CID2. The difference between the WL and WR groups on the correlation slope was compared by ANOVA with the interaction of group ID (WL or WR) and CID2:CID1 as a covariate.
† Correlation was significant different (P < 0·05).
‡ Correlations were significantly different between WL and WR (P < 0·05).
Relationships among anthropometrical, physiological and biochemical characteristics
Multivariate data analysis with discriminant principal component analysis showed that the WL and WR groups can be separated completely on the principal component 1, which accounts for 91 % of the total subject variance and is mainly determined by the weight-maintenance score, weight/BMI, fat mass and waist circumference (Fig. 3(a) and (b)). LEP, CRP, TAG and glucose were also associated with WR, and IGFBP1 was the only associated with WL.
The effect of dietary intervention was minor, as the profiles of LP, HP, LGI and HGI were all close to the origin. WR subjects with LP or HP diets were grouped in a different direction on the principal component 2, which accounts for 2·8 % of the total variance and is mainly determined by CRP, testosterone (TES), retinol-binding protein 4 (RBP4) and fat mass for HP, and glucagon (GCG), adiponectin and LEP for LP (Fig. 3(a) and (b)).
Plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 (PAI1), INS, resistin and LH did not have a loading score ≥ 2 on these two main components, but had a geometric mean ≥ 3 for all components. Therefore, these factors also contributed to maximally explain the variance.
Difference in blood profile by weight maintenance and dietary intervention
Because of the complex interaction of weight maintenance and dietary intervention, multi-way ANOVA taking all factors and their interactions into account was conducted to identify the effect of each factor and of their interactions on the fold change in blood analytes CID3:CID2. Besides this raw model, a controlled model was also analysed with age, weight CID2:CID1 ratio and the CID2:CID1 ratio of the analyte as covariates, because the former two showed to be different with regard to the outcome of weight maintenance, and the latter one was included for controlling the return-back effect that had considerable contribution to the ANOVA model. The results are shown in Table 5 and the supplementary material (available online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn).
GI, glycaemic index; WR, weight regainers; WL, continued weight losers; TES, testosterone; HP, high protein; LH, luteinising hormone; LGI, low GI; LP, low protein; PAI1, plasminogen activator inhibitor-1, active; HGI, high GI; AGT, angiotensinogen; LEP, leptin; RETN, resistin; RBP4, retinol-binding protein 4; INS, insulin; GCG, glucagons; CRP, C-reactive protein; HPT, haptoglobin; GH, growth hormone.
* Significant association (P < 0·03) in the multi-way ANOVA of the fold change (ln after 6-month weight maintenance:after 8-week weight loss (CID2)) in the blood analytes in pooled, or the WL or WR group, without (raw) or with (controlled) age, weight CID2:baseline, before weight-loss (CID1) ratio and the CID2:CID1 ratio of the analyte as covariates.
† The conditions positively associated with the higher/highest fold change in the blood analyte are indicated. The conditions positively associated with the lowest fold change are also indicated in parentheses.
Higher increases in LEP and CRP were positively associated with weight regain in the pooled subjects identified by both raw and controlled models. However, there were some differences among the diets (Fig. 4). Furthermore, LEP positively correlated with fat mass percentage on their fold changes (adjusted for LEP CID2:CID1 ratio) with the diets LP/LGI (r 0·812, P < 0·001), LP/HGI (r 0·602, P = 0·031) and HP/LGI (r 0·606, P = 0·008), but not with the diet HP/HGI (r 0·166, P = 0·510). The relationship between the outcome of weight maintenance and the fold change in LEP was lost after extra controlling for the fold change in fat mass (CID3:CID2) in the model. While for CRP, this extra controlling did not make a difference. IGFBP1 had a trend to positively associate with WL (P = 0·034), but this trend disappeared after controlling for its CID2:CID1 ratio.
Higher increases in TES and CRP were related to a HP diet, but these changes were only found in WR subjects. Higher increases in LEP, INS and GCG were related to a LP diet in the pooled subjects.
There was no analyte for which the fold change did significantly reflect the dietary GI level, neither in pooled subjects nor in WL or WR subjects.
When comparing the interaction of dietary protein and GI, the fold changes in AGT, INS, LH, RBP4 and PAI1 showed difference for the combinations of protein and GI levels. Particularly, AGT and PAI1 had differences of more than two-fold among combinations, which remained significant with post hoc testing (see the supplementary material, available online at http://www.journals.cambridge.org/bjn).
Concerning the efficacy of some blood analytes as the biomarker of dietary protein or GI level, there were significant differences between the WL and WR groups. Interestingly, those markers are functionally related. Fold changes in resistin, CRP and haptoglobin, which are influenced by the interaction of weight maintenance and dietary protein level, are (related to) immunoproteins, whereas fold changes in GH and LH influenced by the interaction of weight maintenance, dietary protein and GI are related to cell growth and development.
Discussion
The present data showed that the changes in measured proteins and steroid hormones during the weight-maintenance phase largely depend on their changes during the weight-loss phase, indicating that the body is trying to return to the original homeostatic state. This process also occurred in the WL group, even though their weight and fat mass continued to decrease. The energy state changing from negative during weight loss to balanced during weight maintenance might be the driving force of this process. Such a return-back effect on blood protein and steroid hormones is in line with a previously observed ‘reversal effect’ on blood lipids, glucose and INS during weight-loss maintenance(Reference Sjostrom, Rissanen and Andersen15, Reference Sjostrom, Lissner and Sjostrom16). In contrast to the WR group, the WL group showed the ability to recall the pre-weight-loss state of IL-6 and to readily reach new states for LEP, pancreatic polypeptide, GH and TNF-α. For LEP as the most important indicator of body fat, it is not surprising that it showed a different pattern between the WL and WR groups concerning this process. It is also reasonable that pancreatic polypeptide as an appetite-regulating hormone that influences energy intake(Reference Cummings and Overduin17) was different. Furthermore, it is known that GH has an abnormal metabolism in obesity(Reference Scacchi, Pincelli and Cavagnini18), of which the mechanism is not clear(Reference Kreitschmann-Andermahr, Suarez and Jennings19). Here, we observed an increase in GH during weight loss followed by a decrease in WR but a stable level in WL during maintenance. However, because of the large inter-individual variation of GH we must be careful in drawing a conclusion. The other two cytokines are both related to obesity(Reference Rankinen, Zuberi and Chagnon20), but return-back regulation of IL-6 failed in the WR group while that of TNF-α did not. The present observations imply that the process controlling the transition of these proteins to a new homeostatic state seems to be different between the WL and WR groups, which warrants further investigations.
The discriminant principal component analysis showed that the WR and WL groups were mainly distinguished by body anthropometrical parameters, but not much by the blood analytes, at least for this 6-month period. The blood profile reflected the diet intervention profile more than weight maintenance. Nevertheless, the differences between the high and low dietary protein or GI levels were modest in the present study, which is in line with the conclusion from the whole Diogenes study(Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak9).
The important contributors identified by discriminant principal component analysis were confirmed by ANOVA. However, in ANOVA, we corrected for the changes during the weight-loss phase, which allowed us to focus on the real effects from different diets or by weight maintenance. Therefore, we used the results from ANOVA to identify blood biomarkers. In this way, LEP and CRP were the only two proteins significantly associated with weight regain. Although these two proteins are well recognised as obesity biomarkers, the present results provide additional details about the effect of the dietary components.
LEP is primarily released by adipocytes(Reference Moreno-Aliaga, Lorente-Cebrian and Martinez21) and its circulating level reflects the amount of adipose tissue in the body. Therefore, it is logical that LEP is a biomarker of WR due to regained fat mass, as observed by others(Reference Vogels and Westerterp-Plantenga22). Interestingly, although their fat mass increased similarly as with other diets, the WR group with the HP/HGI diet failed to increase LEP more than the WL group with the same diet. LEP did not follow the change in body fat mass, implying that abnormal regulation occurs on the secretion of LEP in proportion to the fat mass with this diet. A previous study has shown that a HP diet blunts the increase in LEP during weight maintenance compared with LP diets, done with a 20 % higher protein intake (18 % v. 15 %E) for a 3-month weight-maintenance period(Reference Westerterp-Plantenga, Lejeune and Nijs23). A HP diet is suggested to stimulate the central nervous system LEP sensitivity to compensate for the decrease in LEP level and to sustain reduction in appetite and weight(Reference Weigle, Breen and Matthys24). However, another study could not significantly demonstrate this effect of a HP diet (25 % v. 15 %E) for a comparable weight-maintenance period(Reference Claessens, van Baak and Monsheimer25). We also observed a trend for the influence of GI on the effect of HP (interaction P = 0·074), namely that only with HGI there is a lowering effect of diet protein (P = 0·015) on the change in LEP. On the other hand, with HGI there is also an enhancing effect of weight regain (P = 0·020) on the change in LEP. Therefore, with the combination diet HP/HGI, there was no apparent difference between the WR and WL groups. This complex interaction between diet GI and weight-maintenance performance may explain the inconsistencies in previous studies and suggests that GI may influence the signalling of LEP in the brain.
Although CRP is not an adipokine, it is strongly associated with total and abdominal, subcutaneous and visceral adiposity, especially in pre-menopausal women(Reference Cartier, Cote and Lemieux26, Reference Rexrode, Pradhan and Manson27). CRP increased during the weight-maintenance phase only with a HP diet in the WR group. This interaction between diet protein and the outcome of weight maintenance has not been reported before. This finding may explain the discrepancy between the present result and those from others. Due et al. (Reference Due, Toubro and Stender28) did not find the effect of a HP diet on CRP and other acute-phase proteins, possibly because their subjects all lost weight in a 6-month weight-control programme. Other studies have reported CRP to be decreased by a HP diet(Reference Abete, Astrup and Martinez29), but in those studies, the effects of weight loss and dietary protein level were not dissected. We did not observe an effect of HP on CRP in weight losers, but in the present case, this could be due to the fact that there was only slight difference in dietary protein intake in HP and LP subjects in the WL group (Table 3).
CRP is produced by the liver, and it is known that liver function can be affected by dietary protein level as has been demonstrated for the hepatic gluconeogenesis(Reference Linn, Santosa and Gronemeyer30). Production of CRP can be induced by adipocytokines including IL-6 and TNF-α(Reference Gabay and Kushner31), but in the present study the HP diet had no effect on the blood level of those factors. Thus, we speculate that the HP intake can enhance the sensitivity for adipocytokines to stimulate the production of CRP from the liver. Besides CRP, the other two proteins that showed significant interaction between diet protein and maintenance with a similar pattern, haptoglobin and resistin, are also related to the immune system. As with CRP, haptoglobin is also mainly secreted from the liver(Reference Patel, Buckels and Kinghorn32). Interestingly, a study in mice has suggested that a HP diet provokes a more profound response of the immune system to an infection than a LP diet(Reference Oarada, Kamei and Gonoi33). This augments the link between the immune system and the HP diet. Finally, because CRP is a predictor of CVD(Reference Danesh, Wheeler and Hirschfield34), the risk to increase the CRP concentration by weight regain with a HP diet needs confirmation and further investigation on a longer term and in a larger population.
An increase in TES has not been linked to the dietary protein level before. TES is an anabolic hormone. A few studies have pointed out that protein nutrition attenuates the increase in TES by resistance training(Reference Hulmi, Ahtiainen and Selanne35, Reference Chandler, Byrne and Patterson36). The present data suggest that a HP diet may prevent the body from going into a catabolic state during weight maintenance. In addition, TES acts to increase lipolysis and its administration in males induced a loss of adipose tissue in the leg(Reference Woodhouse, Gupta and Bhasin37).
INS and GCG were identified as biomarkers of a LP diet. This finding is not in line with the concept that elevated postprandial amino acids stimulate INS and GCG secretion(Reference Promintzer and Krebs38). However, as a high level of carbohydrate is part of the LP diet, they could as well be biomarkers of a high-carbohydrate diet, which would fit well with the main function of these two hormones in the carbohydrate metabolism.
Compared with dietary protein, differences in GI had less effect on the blood profile of examined proteins and steroids. However, several analytes were significantly influenced by the interaction between protein and GI, especially PAI1, AGT and LH. The dietary effect of protein and GI on AGT and LH has not been reported in human subjects, and therefore the present results require further validation. The present finding that PAI1 is repressed by the LGI diet is in line with a study in non-diabetic obese women(Reference Jensen, Sloth and Krog-Mikkelsen39). In that study, this effect was observed with 12–15 %E protein in the diet(Reference Jensen, Sloth and Krog-Mikkelsen39). We observed this effect in combination with the HP diet in WL subjects, which is somehow surprising because of the small difference in protein intake between the LP and HP groups among the WL subjects. PAI1 is not only a vascular factor playing an important role in thrombosis, but is also involved in the regulation of the extracellular matrix of adipocytes and may play a positive role in the development of adipocytes(Reference Mariman and Wang40). Suppression of PAI1 may therefore inhibit adipose tissue development, explaining the relationship between HP/LGI intake and weight loss during the weight-maintenance phase(Reference Larsen, Dalskov and van Baak9).
In summary, the blood protein and steroid measurements indicate that the WL and WR groups during the maintenance phase differ in the process controlling adaptation to a new homeotic state. In addition, our measurements indicate that a HP diet may be beneficial to prevent weight regain and reduce adipose tissue growth by lowering GCG and INS, and by enhancing the anabolic state and lipolysis via TES. Furthermore, the diet HP in combination with the diet LGI has an inhibiting effect on weight regain by lowering the plasma level of PAI1, a modulator of adipose tissue development. However, the effect of the HP diet on body weight could not be confirmed by the present data on fat mass, perhaps due to limited sample size of this Diogenes subcohort. Finally, the increased CRP level in weight regainers on a HP diet may point to a potential health risk.
The present observations were obtained in women with limited sample size as a result of the careful phenotypic selection and the analytical feasibility. Therefore, further studies in men are needed and validation in a larger cohort. Because of our limited sample size and stringent cut-off criteria, we may have missed some true biomarkers. As such, the present findings provide leads for further investigation to better understand the process of weight maintenance.
Acknowledgements
The Diogenes project was supported by a contract (FP6-2005-513946) from the European Commission Food Quality and Safety Priority of the Sixth Framework Program. The authors' contributions were as follows: E. C. M. M., P. W., A. A. and W. H. M. S. designed the study; M. A. v. B., L. G. R., S. A. J., A. F. H. P., J. A. M., T. H.-D., A. K. and P. H. conducted the intervention and collected the samples; P. W., F. G. B., S. v. O., W. K. W. H. W. and M. R. A. analysed the blood samples; P. W. and C. H. analysed the data; P. W. and E. C. M. M. drafted the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. The authors declare that there is no conflict of interest.