缺氧抑制高脂肪饮食诱导的脂肪变性和肝腺瘤的发展

Nathan W. Sweeney, Cecil J. Gomes, R. De Armond, Sara M Centuori, S. Parthasarathy, Jesse D. Martinez
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引用次数: 3

摘要

目的:非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD)被认为是美国最常见的无症状肝病,肥胖与NAFLD风险增加相关。在肥胖人群中常见的阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停(OSA)与NAFLD的发生率较高相关,NAFLD反过来又增加了患肝细胞癌(HCC)的风险。目前尚不清楚肥胖、阻塞性睡眠呼吸暂停和NAFLD之间的相互关系,也不清楚它们如何共同导致发生HCC的风险增加。患者和方法雄性BALB/c小鼠暴露于二乙基亚硝胺和苯巴比妥48周后,分别饲喂标准饲料、低氧饲料、高脂饲料或低氧高脂饲料组合。我们使用微ct成像无创监测肿瘤的发展。我们跟踪了整个研究过程中增加的总体重。我们评估了肝脏组织学、脂肪积累、碳酸酐酶9 (CA9)和缺氧诱导因子1- α (HIF-1α)的表达,以及血清天冬氨酸转氨酶(AST)和丙氨酸转氨酶(ALT)。结果无缺氧的高脂饮食可导致肥胖的发生,从而诱发肝脂肪变性,促进肿瘤发生。与不缺氧的高脂肪饮食相比,高脂肪饮食和缺氧环境下的动物总体重增加更少,脂肪变性更低,血清谷丙转氨酶和谷丙转氨酶水平更低,肝腺瘤数量更少。结论低氧可消除与高脂肪饮食有关的肥胖、肝脂肪变性和肝肿瘤发生。
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Hypoxia Suppresses High Fat Diet-Induced Steatosis And Development Of Hepatic Adenomas
Purpose Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is considered the most common form of silent liver disease in the United States and obesity is associated with increased risk of NAFLD. Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) which is common in obese individuals is associated with a greater incidence of NAFLD, which in turn, increases the risk for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). It is unclear how obesity, OSA and NAFLD interrelate nor how they collectively contribute to an increased risk for developing HCC. Patients and methods Male BALB/c mice were exposed to diethylnitrosamine and phenobarbital followed by 48 weeks of either standard chow diet (chow), chow with hypoxia, high-fat diet, or a combination of hypoxia and high-fat diet. We noninvasively monitored tumor development using micro-CT imaging. We tracked the total weight gained throughout the study. We evaluated liver histology, fat accumulation, carbonic anhydrase 9 (CA9) and hypoxia-inducible factor 1-alpha (HIF-1α) expression, as well as, serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST) and alanine aminotransferase (ALT). Results A high-fat diet without hypoxia led to the development of obesity that induced hepatic steatosis and promoted tumorigenesis. Animals on a high-fat diet and that were also exposed to hypoxia had lower total weight gain, lower steatosis, lower serum AST and ALT levels, and fewer number of hepatic adenomas than a high-fat diet without hypoxia. Conclusion These findings suggest that hypoxia abrogates obesity, hepatic steatosis, and hepatic tumorigenesis related to a high-fat diet.
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