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A novel and comprehensive mouse model of human non‐alcoholic steatohepatitis with the full range of dysmetabolic and histological abnormalities induced by gold thioglucose and a high‐fat diet
Author(s) -
Ogasawara Mitsunari,
Hirose Akira,
Ono Masafumi,
Aritake Kosuke,
Nozaki Yasuko,
Takahashi Masaya,
Okamoto Nobuto,
Sakamoto Shuji,
Iwasaki Shinji,
Asanuma Taketoshi,
Taniguchi Taketoshi,
Urade Yoshihiro,
Onishi Saburo,
Saibara Toshiji,
Oben Jude A
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
liver international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.873
H-Index - 110
eISSN - 1478-3231
pISSN - 1478-3223
DOI - 10.1111/j.1478-3231.2010.02443.x
Subject(s) - steatohepatitis , medicine , endocrinology , adiponectin , fatty liver , insulin resistance , steatosis , fibrosis , diabetes mellitus , disease
Background: The search for effective treatments of non‐alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), now the most common chronic liver disease in affluent countries, is hindered by a lack of animal models having the range of anthropometric and pathophysiological features as human NASH. Aims: To examine if mice treated with gold thioglucose (GTG) – known to induce lesions in the ventromedial hypothalamus, leading to hyperphagia and obesity – and then fed a high‐fat diet (HF) had a comprehensive histological and dysmetabolic phenotype resembling human NASH. Methods: C57BL/6 mice were injected intraperitoneally with GTG and then fed HF for 12 weeks (GTG+HF). The extent of abdominal adiposity was assayed by CT scanning. A glucose tolerance test and an insulin tolerance test were performed to evaluate insulin resistance (IR). Histological, molecular and biochemical analyses were also performed. Results: Gold thioglucose+HF induced dysmetabolism, with hyperphagia, obesity with increased abdominal adiposity, IR and consequent steatohepatitis, with hepatocyte ballooning, Mallory–Denk bodies, perivenular and pericellular fibrosis as seen in adult NASH, paralleled by an increased expression of the profibrogenic factors, transforming growth factor‐β1 and TIMP‐1. Plasma adiponectin and the expression of adiponectin receptor 1 and receptor 2 were decreased, while PPAR‐γ and FAS were increased in the livers of GTG+HF mice. In addition, GTG+HF mice showed glucose intolerance and severe IR. Conclusions: Treatment with GTG and HF diet induce, in mice, a comprehensive model of human NASH, with the full range of dysmetabolic and histological abnormalities.