A diet-induced animal model of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and hepatocellular cancer
Virginia Commonwealth University · Délégation Paris 7 · +2 more institutions
Abstract
A stable isogenic cross between C57BL/6J (B6) and 129S1/SvImJ (S129) mice were fed a high fat diet with ad libitum consumption of glucose and fructose in physiologically relevant concentrations and compared to mice fed a chow diet and also to both parent strains.
Following initiation of the obesogenic diet, B6/129 mice developed obesity, insulin resistance, hypertriglyceridemia and increased LDL-cholesterol. They sequentially also developed steatosis (4-8weeks), steatohepatitis (16-24weeks), progressive fibrosis (16weeks onwards) and spontaneous hepatocellular cancer (HCC). There was a strong concordance between the pattern of pathway activation at a transcriptomic level between humans and mice with similar histological phenotypes (FDR 0.02 for early and 0.08 for late time points). Lipogenic, inflammatory and apoptotic signaling pathways activated in human NASH were also activated in these mice. The HCC gene signature resembled the S1 and S2 human subclasses of HCC (FDR 0.01 for both). Only the B6/129 mouse but not the parent strains recapitulated all of these aspects of human NAFLD.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 31.48
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 32
Authors
18Topics & keywords
- Steatohepatitis
- Fatty liver
- Steatosis
- Insulin resistance
- Endocrinology
- Internal medicine
- Medicine
- Transcriptome
- Good health and well-being