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Unsaturated or saturated dietary fat-mediated steatosis impairs hepatic regeneration following partial hepatectomy in mice.

PloS one
May 5, 2023
S M Touhidul Islam et al. (6 authors)
Journal ArticleAnimal Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to investigate the impact of saturated and unsaturated high-fat diets on liver regeneration following partial hepatectomy in mice.

Results Summary

Mice fed high-fat diets (saturated or unsaturated) exhibited higher NAFLD scores, increased inflammation, and impaired liver regeneration compared to those on a low-fat diet. The saturated fat diet showed worse outcomes in terms of inflammation and regeneration than the unsaturated fat diet.

Population

Mice with induced hepatic steatosis undergoing partial hepatectomy.

Effective Dosage

Low-fat control diet (13% fat), lard-based unsaturated high-fat diet (60% fat), milk-based saturated high-fat diet (60% fat).

Duration

16 weeks.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (22)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
increase
NAFLD scores
Mice
-
exhibited higher
#1
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
increase
inflammatory cytokines
Mice
-
increased expression of
#2
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
increase
neutrophil infiltration
Mice
-
exhibited
#3
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
increase
macrophage accumulation
Mice
-
exhibited
#4
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
increase
increased apoptosis
Mice
-
exhibited
#5
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
increase
serum ALT activities
Mice
-
exhibited elevated levels of
#6
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
increase
serum AST activities
Mice
-
exhibited elevated levels of
#7
lard-based unsaturated high fat diet (LD, 60% fat)
decrease
BrdU-incorporated-hepatocytes in the regenerated livers
Mice
-
exhibited a decrease in the number of
#8
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
NAFLD scores
Mice
-
exhibited higher
#9
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
inflammatory cytokines
Mice
-
increased expression of
#10
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
neutrophil infiltration
Mice
-
exhibited
#11
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
macrophage accumulation
Mice
-
exhibited
#12
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
increased apoptosis
Mice
-
exhibited
#13
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
serum ALT activities
Mice
-
exhibited elevated levels of
#14
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
serum AST activities
Mice
-
exhibited elevated levels of
#15
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
decrease
BrdU-incorporated-hepatocytes in the regenerated livers
Mice
-
exhibited a decrease in the number of
#16
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
decrease
BrdU-incorporated hepatocytes
Mice
-
showed significantly lower percent of
#17
milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat)
increase
inflammation
Mice
-
showed a higher trend of
#18
diet rich in saturated or unsaturated fat
increase
NASH
mice
-
results in
#19
diet rich in saturated or unsaturated fat
decrease
decreased hepatic regeneration
mice
-
results in
#20
unsaturated fat diet
decrease
inflammation
mice
-
cause lower
#21
unsaturated fat diet
increase
regeneration
mice
-
cause higher
#22
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Partial hepatectomy is a preferred treatment option for many patients with hepatocellular carcinoma however, pre-existing pathological abnormalities originating from hepatic steatosis can alter the decision to perform surgery or postoperative outcomes as a consequence of the impact steatosis has on liver regeneration. AIM: The aim of this study was to investigate the role of a saturated or unsaturated high fat diet-mediated steatosis on liver regeneration following partial hepatectomy. METHODS: Mice were fed a low-fat control diet (CD, 13% fat), lard-based unsaturated (LD, 60% fat) or milk-based saturated high fat diet (MD, 60% fat) for 16 weeks at which time partial hepatectomy (approx. 70% resection) was performed. At days-2 and 7 post hepatectomy, one hour prior to euthanization, mice were injected with 5-bromo-2'-deoxyuridine in order to monitor hepatic regeneration. Serum was collected and assessed for levels of ALT and AST. Resected and regenerated liver tissue were examined for inflammation-indicative markers employing RT-PCR, Western blots, and histological methods. RESULTS: Mice fed LD or MD exhibited higher NAFLD scores, increased expression of inflammatory cytokines, neutrophil infiltration, macrophage accumulation, increased apoptosis, and elevated levels of serum ALT and AST activities, a decrease in the number of BrdU-incorporated-hepatocytes in the regenerated livers compared to the mice fed CD. Mice fed MD showed significantly lower percent of BrdU-incorporated hepatocytes and a higher trend of inflammation compared to the mice fed LD. CONCLUSION: A diet rich in saturated or unsaturated fat results in NASH with decreased hepatic regeneration however unsaturated fat diet cause lower inflammation and higher regeneration than the saturated fat diet following partial hepatectomy in mice.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
MiceAnimalsHepatectomyBromodeoxyuridineLiverNon-alcoholic Fatty Liver DiseaseDietary FatsDiet, High-FatInflammationFats, UnsaturatedMice, Inbred C57BL
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety30
Efficacy70/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations3
Citations/Year1.5
Relative Citation Ratio0.51
NIH Percentile27.8%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.05
Weight Score2.02
Normalized Score0.57
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