AI Article Synopsis

  • Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is often related to being overweight, problems with insulin, and how the body processes fats, but scientists still don’t fully understand how these issues are connected.
  • In a study with 14-week-old Ob/Ob mice, which are known for obesity, researchers found higher levels of glucose and insulin, along with bigger livers and more fat in the liver compared to normal mice.
  • The Ob/Ob mice showed signs of making more fat in their liver and had some problems with their mitochondria, which are important for energy, suggesting that these factors lead to fatty liver disease in obesity.

Article Abstract

Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is strongly linked to obesity, insulin resistance, and abnormal hepatic lipid metabolism; however, the precise regulation of these processes remains poorly understood. Here we examined genes and proteins involved in hepatic oxidation and lipogenesis in 14-week-old leptin-deficient Ob/Ob mice, a commonly studied model of obesity and hepatic steatosis. Obese Ob/Ob mice had increased fasting glucose, insulin, and calculated HOMA-IR as compared with lean wild-type (WT) mice. Ob/Ob mice also had greater liver weights, hepatic triglyceride (TG) content, and markers of de novo lipogenesis, including increased hepatic gene expression and protein content of acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACC), fatty acid synthase (FAS), and stearoyl-CoA desaturase-1 (SCD-1), as well as elevated gene expression of PPARγ and SREBP-1c compared with WT mice. While hepatic mRNA levels for PGC-1α, PPARα, and TFAM were elevated in Ob/Ob mice, measures of mitochondrial function (β-HAD activity and complete (to CO(2)) and total mitochondrial palmitate oxidation) and mitochondrial OXPHOS protein subunits I, III, and V content were significantly reduced compared with WT animals. In summary, reduced hepatic mitochondrial content and function and an upregulation in de novo lipogenesis contribute to obesity-associated NAFLD in the leptin-deficient Ob/Ob mouse.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3562693PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2013/296537DOI Listing

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