Impact of Some Natural and Artificial Sweeteners Consumption on Different Hormonal Levels and Inflammatory Cytokines in Male Rats: In Vivo and In Silico Studies

ACS Omega. 2024 Jul 1;9(28):30364-30380. doi: 10.1021/acsomega.4c01250. eCollection 2024 Jul 16.

Abstract

Substituting sugar with noncaloric sweeteners prevents overweight and diabetes development. They come in two types: artificial, like aspartame and sucralose, and natural, such as sorbitol. This research aimed to assess the effects of sucrose and these sweeteners on nutritional parameters, hematological parameters, hormones, and anti- and pro-inflammatory cytokines in male rats. Thirty rats had been separated into five groups. The results showed the highest significant increase in body weight gain, total food intake, and feed efficiency noticed in the aspartame group followed by sucralose, sucrose, and sorbitol, respectively. In contrast to RBCs and platelets, all sweeteners significantly reduced the hemoglobin level, Hct %, and WBC count. The aspartame group showed the highest decline in glycoproteins, steroids, and T3, and T4 hormones and a dramatic elevation in thyroid stimulating hormone, eicosanoid, and amine hormones compared with the control group. A vigorous elevation in anti- and proinflammatory cytokine levels was observed in the aspartame group, followed by sucralose, sucrose, and sorbitol groups. Aspartame has the highest docking scores when studying the interactions of sweeteners and a target protein associated with hormones or cytokines using in silico molecular docking, with the best absorption, distribution, metabolism, elimination, and toxicity properties compared to the remaining sweeteners.