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CARDIOVASCULAR JOURNAL OF AFRICA • Volume 32, No 2, March/April 2021

AFRICA

87

The modulating effects of green rooibos (

Aspalathus

linearis

) extract on vascular function and antioxidant

status in obese Wistar rats

Zimvo Obasa, Mignon Albertha van Vuuren, Barbara Huisamen, Shantal Lynn Windvogel

Abstract

Purpose:

Obesity is associated with the development of risk

factors for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and polyphenols

have been shown to possess ameliorative effects against obesi-

ty-induced CVD risk factors. Rooibos (

Aspalathus linearis

)

is rich in polyphenols, therefore we investigated the cardio-

protective effects of aspalathin-rich green rooibos

(GRT) on

obesity-induced CVD risk factors in obese Wistar rats.

Methods:

Adult male Wistar rats (

n

= 20 per group) were fed

a control or a high-fat diet (HFD) for 16 weeks and treated

with GRT (60 mg/kg/day) for six weeks. Blood pressure was

monitored throughout. Vascular reactivity was measured and

Western blots of cell-signalling proteins (eNOS, AMPK and

PKB) were performed in aortic tissues. Effects on oxidative

stress were determined by measuring antioxidant enzyme

activity and thiobarbituric reactive substance (TBARS) levels

in the liver.

Results:

HFD animals had (1) increased blood pressure,

(2) impaired vasodilation, (3) attenuated PKB and AMPK

expression, (4) decreased antioxidant enzyme activity, (5)

increased malondialdehyde (MDA) levels, and (6) increased

phosphorylated eNOS levels. Treatment with GRT extract

significantly alleviated these obesity-induced CVD risk

factors.

Conclusion:

Supplementation with GRT extract alleviated

cardiovascular risk factors in the HFD animals, suggesting a

therapeutic potential for GRT in obesity-induced cardiovas-

cular risk.

Keywords:

obesity, blood pressure, vascular reactivity, oxidative

stress, glucose homeostasis, Afriplex GRT

TM

extract

Submitted 18/6/19, accepted 2/10/20

Published online 18/2/21

Cardiovasc J Afr

2021;

32

: 87–97

www.cvja.co.za

DOI: 10.5830/CVJA-2020-048

Cardiovascular disease (CVD), the leading cause of death

globally, accounted for 17.7 million deaths in 2016, and is mostly

prevalent in low- to middle-income countries.

1

Behavioural risk

factors for CVD include a sedentary lifestyle, tobacco smoking

and alcohol abuse, which manifest as obesity, hypertension,

type 2 diabetes, dyslipidaemia and raised blood glucose levels in

individuals.

2

Obesity is a major global health problem and is on the rise,

especially in developing countries where it is mostly prevalent

in the adult population.

2

It results when there is an energy

imbalance between caloric intake and caloric expenditure,

3

and is

associated with development of the metabolic syndrome (MetS),

a conglomerate of cardiometabolic risk factors that elevate CVD

risk.

4,5

The MetS is characterised by insulin resistance, elevated

blood pressure, impaired glucose homeostasis, atherogenic

dyslipidaemia and systemic inflammation.

4,5

Obesity is also

associated with the development of endothelial dysfunction

6

and

oxidative stress.

7

Rooibos (

Aspalathus linearis

), a leguminous shrub indigenous

to the Cederberg Mountains of the Western Cape in South

Africa, has numerous health-promoting properties, such as

anti-hypertensive,

8

antidiabetic,

9,10

anti-hyperglycaemic,

9-12

anti-

inflammatory,

13

antioxidant,

14

anti-cancer

15

and anti-obesity

effects.

16

This is mainly attributed to its polyphenolic composition,

particularly aspalathin, auniquemajor active flavonoid compound,

and nothofagin, a 3-dehydroxydihydrochalcone glucoside.

12

When the rooibos plant is harvested, it is processed into

fermented (oxidised) and unfermented (un-oxidised) products,

which may be used to make herbal infusions and extracts.

17,18

The unfermented ‘green’ rooibos is commonly used to

prepare aspalathin-rich extracts due to the preservation of its

polyphenolic content.

9

Afriplex GRT

TM

(GRT) extract, a spray-

dried powder with a high aspalathin content, used in this study,

was prepared from unfermented rooibos.

To date, no studies have been performed investigating the

relationship between the ameliorative effects of this GRT extract

on obesity-induced CVD risk factors. Therefore, in view of

the known health benefits of rooibos, we set out to determine

whether GRT extract could improve obesity-induced CVD risk

factors in an animal model.

Methods

Adult male Wistar rats weighing between 150 and 210 g and

approximately seven to eight weeks old were obtained from the

central animal facility of the Faculty of Medicine and Health

Sciences at Stellenbosch University. They were housed in cages

containing four rats per cage and maintained under a 12-hour

day/night cycle at 24–25°C. Animals had

ad libitum

access to

food and water.

Centre for Cardio-metabolic Research in Africa (CARMA),

Division of Medical Physiology, Faculty of Medicine and

Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town,

South Africa

Zimvo Obasa, MSc,

maqeda@sun.ac.za

Mignon Albertha van Vuuren, PhD

Barbara Huisamen, PhD

Shantal Lynn Windvogel, PhD

Biomedical Research and Innovation Platform, South

African Medical Research Council, Tygerberg, South Africa

Barbara Huisamen, PhD