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Vitamin E does not prevent Western diet-induced NASH progression and increases metabolic flux dysregulation in mice.

Citation
Hasenour, C. M., et al. “Vitamin E Does Not Prevent Western Diet-Induced Nash Progression And Increases Metabolic Flux Dysregulation In Mice.”. Journal Of Lipid Research, pp. 707-721.
Center Vanderbilt University
Author Clinton M Hasenour, Arion J Kennedy, Tomasz Bednarski, Irina A Trenary, Brandon J Eudy, Robin P da Silva, Kelli L Boyd, Jamey D Young
Keywords ceramides, citric acid cycle, Gluconeogenesis, glucose, metabolic disorder, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, phospholipids, triglycerides, vitamin E
Abstract

Fatty liver involves ectopic lipid accumulation and dysregulated hepatic oxidative metabolism, which can progress to a state of elevated inflammation and fibrosis referred to as nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). The factors that control progression from simple steatosis to NASH are not fully known. Here, we tested the hypothesis that dietary vitamin E (VitE) supplementation would prevent NASH progression and associated metabolic alterations induced by a Western diet (WD). Hyperphagic melanocortin-4 receptor-deficient (MC4R) mice were fed chow, chow+VitE, WD, or WD+VitE starting at 8 or 20 weeks of age. All groups exhibited extensive hepatic steatosis by the end of the study (28 weeks of age). WD feeding exacerbated liver disease severity without inducing proportional changes in liver triglycerides. Eight weeks of WD accelerated liver pyruvate cycling, and 20 weeks of WD extensively upregulated liver glucose and oxidative metabolism assessed by H/C flux analysis. VitE supplementation failed to reduce the histological features of NASH. Rather, WD+VitE increased the abundance and saturation of liver ceramides and accelerated metabolic flux dysregulation compared with 8 weeks of WD alone. In summary, VitE did not limit NASH pathogenesis in genetically obese mice, but instead increased some indicators of metabolic dysfunction.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
Journal of lipid research
Volume
61
Issue
5
Number of Pages
707-721
Date Published
05/2020
ISSN Number
1539-7262
DOI
10.1194/jlr.RA119000183
Alternate Journal
J. Lipid Res.
PMID
32086244
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