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Inhibition of chylomicron assembly leads to dissociation of hepatic steatosis from inflammation and fibrosis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Blocking chylomicron assembly can slow down the progression of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) by decreasing factors like fat build-up, inflammation, and oxidative stress.
  • Inducing chylomicron assembly after significant liver damage can actually worsen inflammation and fibrosis, despite reducing liver fat levels.
  • When researchers switched diet models, stopping a high-fat diet without chylomicron assembly did lower liver fat, but did not improve inflammation or fibrosis, highlighting the complex effects of dietary fat absorption regulation.

Article Abstract

Regulating dietary fat absorption may impact progression of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Here, we asked if inducible inhibition of chylomicron assembly, as observed in intestine-specific microsomal triglyceride (TG) transfer protein knockout mice (Mttp-IKO), could retard NAFLD progression and/or reverse established fibrosis in two dietary models. Mttp-IKO mice fed a methionine/choline-deficient (MCD) diet exhibited reduced hepatic TGs, inflammation, and fibrosis, associated with reduced oxidative stress and downstream activation of c-Jun N-terminal kinase and nuclear factor kappa B signaling pathways. However, when Mttp mice were fed an MCD for 5 weeks and then administered tamoxifen to induce Mttp-IKO, hepatic TG was reduced, but inflammation and fibrosis were increased after 10 days of reversal along with adaptive changes in hepatic lipogenic mRNAs. Extending the reversal time, following 5 weeks of MCD feeding to 30 days led to sustained reductions in hepatic TG, but neither inflammation nor fibrosis was decreased, and both intestinal permeability and hepatic lipogenesis were increased. In a second model, similar reductions in hepatic TG were observed when mice were fed a high-fat/high-fructose/high-cholesterol (HFFC) diet for 10 weeks, then switched to chow ± tamoxifen (HFFC → chow) or (HFFC → Mttp-IKO chow), but again neither inflammation nor fibrosis was affected. In conclusion, we found that blocking chylomicron assembly attenuates MCD-induced NAFLD progression by reducing steatosis, oxidative stress, and inflammation. In contrast, blocking chylomicron assembly in the setting of established hepatic steatosis and fibrosis caused increased intestinal permeability and compensatory shifts in hepatic lipogenesis that mitigate resolution of inflammation and fibrogenic signaling despite 50-90-fold reductions in hepatic TG.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8515302PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jlr.2021.100123DOI Listing

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