AI Article Synopsis

  • Aging increases the severity of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) in mice, with older mice showing more liver inflammation and oxidative stress when fed a high-fat diet.
  • In older mice, high-fat diet consumption leads to enhanced fatty acid synthesis and reduced fatty acid breakdown, along with decreased liver secretion of lipids.
  • Lipidomics analysis revealed significant changes in fatty acid composition in older mice, including increased diacylglycerol and TAG with monounsaturated fatty acids, while levels of certain polyunsaturated fatty acids were decreased, suggesting that age alters lipid metabolism and contributes to liver damage.

Article Abstract

Background And Aim: Aging is an independent risk factor for the progression of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis. Here, we investigated the role of age-related alterations in fatty acid metabolism in dietary steatohepatitis using lipidomics analysis.

Methods: Male 8-week and 55-week-old C57BL/6 J mice were fed a high-fat diet (HFD) for 8 weeks. The quality and quantity of lipid molecular species in the liver were evaluated using the lipidomics approach.

Results: Elder mice fed an HFD developed more severe steatohepatitis than young mice. Oxidative stress and inflammatory cytokines in the liver were exacerbated following HFD feeding in elder mice compared with young mice. In elder mice, de novo fatty acid synthesis was promoted, whereas β oxidation was blunted following HFD feeding, and lipid secretion from the liver was reduced. The expression of sirtuin 1 was not only reduced with age as expected but also significantly decreased due to intake of HFD. In the lipidomics analysis, the concentrations of diacylglycerol and TAG molecular species containing monounsaturated fatty acids were markedly increased following HFD feeding in elder mice compared with young mice. In contrast, the concentration of phosphatidylethanolamine and phosphatidylcholine molecular species containing polyunsaturated fatty acids were remarkably decreased following HFD feeding in elder mice compared with young mice, and the expression of fatty acid desaturase was blunted.

Conclusions: Aging-dependent alterations in lipid metabolism under excessive lipid supply most likely enhance hepatic lipotoxicity, thereby exacerbating metabolic steatohepatitis in elderly.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jgh.15006DOI Listing

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