Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1989578 | The Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry | 2016 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Diets containing excess carbohydrate and fat promote hepatic steatosis and steatohepatitis in mice. Little is known, however, about the impact of specific carbohydrate/fat combinations on liver outcome. This study was designed to determine whether high-energy diets with identical caloric density but different carbohydrate and fat composition have unique effects on the liver. Four experimental diets were formulated with 60%Â kcal carbohydrate and 20%Â kcal fat, each in nearly pure form from a single source: starch-oleate, starch-palmitate, sucrose-oleate and sucrose-palmitate. The diets were fed to mice for 3 or 12Â weeks for analysis of lipid metabolism and liver injury. All mice developed hepatic steatosis over 12Â weeks, but mice fed the sucrose-palmitate diet accumulated more hepatic lipid than those in the other three experimental groups. The exaggerated lipid accumulation in sucrose-palmitate-fed mice was attributable to a disproportionate rise in hepatic de novo lipogenesis. These mice accrued more hepatic palmitate and exhibited more evidence of liver injury than any of the other experimental groups. Interestingly, lipogenic gene expression in mice fed the custom diets did not correlate with actual de novo lipogenesis. In addition, de novo lipogenesis rose in all mice between 3 and 12Â weeks, without feedback inhibition from hepatic steatosis. The pairing of simple sugar (sucrose) and saturated fat (palmitate) in a high-carbohydrate/moderate-fat diet induces more de novo lipogenesis and liver injury than other carbohydrate/fat combinations. Diet-induced liver injury correlates positively with hepatic de novo lipogenesis and is not predictable by isolated analysis of lipogenic gene expression.
Keywords
Mass isotopomer distribution analysisDNLCPT1MCDSCD1SFAMUFAALTFFAFASGC-MSAlanine aminotransferasede novo lipogenesisSteatohepatitisnonalcoholic steatohepatitisStearoyl-CoA desaturase 1Free fatty acidPolyunsaturated fatty acidsfatty acid synthasePUFAsaturated fatty acidsmonounsaturated fatty acidsTerminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase dUTP nick end labelingtriacylglycerolTAG یا triacylglycerols triglycerideTUNELdiacylglycerolDAGSucrosepalmitateSugarNash saturated fatMIDACarnitine palmitoyltransferase 1Fatty liverGC-MS, gas chromatography-mass spectrometry
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Authors
Andrew A. Pierce, Caroline C. Duwaerts, Russell K. Soon, Kevin Siao, James P. Grenert, Mark Fitch, Marc K. Hellerstein, Carine Beysen, Scott M. Turner, Jacquelyn J. Maher,