968 resultados para Fatty Liver


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Liver-specific and nonliver-specific methionine adenosyltransferases (MATs) are products of two genes, MAT1A and MAT2A, respectively, that catalyze the formation of S-adenosylmethionine (AdoMet), the principal biological methyl donor. Mature liver expresses MAT1A, whereas MAT2A is expressed in extrahepatic tissues and is induced during liver growth and dedifferentiation. To examine the influence of MAT1A on hepatic growth, we studied the effects of a targeted disruption of the murine MAT1A gene. MAT1A mRNA and protein levels were absent in homozygous knockout mice. At 3 months, plasma methionine level increased 776% in knockouts. Hepatic AdoMet and glutathione levels were reduced by 74 and 40%, respectively, whereas S-adenosylhomocysteine, methylthioadenosine, and global DNA methylation were unchanged. The body weight of 3-month-old knockout mice was unchanged from wild-type littermates, but the liver weight was increased 40%. The Affymetrix genechip system and Northern and Western blot analyses were used to analyze differential expression of genes. The expression of many acute phase-response and inflammatory markers, including orosomucoid, amyloid, metallothionein, Fas antigen, and growth-related genes, including early growth response 1 and proliferating cell nuclear antigen, is increased in the knockout animal. At 3 months, knockout mice are more susceptible to choline-deficient diet-induced fatty liver. At 8 months, knockout mice developed spontaneous macrovesicular steatosis and predominantly periportal mononuclear cell infiltration. Thus, absence of MAT1A resulted in a liver that is more susceptible to injury, expresses markers of an acute phase response, and displays increased proliferation.

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BACKGROUND & AIMS The liver performs a panoply of complex activities coordinating metabolic, immunologic and detoxification processes. Despite the liver's robustness and unique self-regeneration capacity, viral infection, autoimmune disorders, fatty liver disease, alcohol abuse and drug-induced hepatotoxicity contribute to the increasing prevalence of liver failure. Liver injuries impair the clearance of bile acids from the hepatic portal vein which leads to their spill over into the peripheral circulation where they activate the G-protein-coupled bile acid receptor TGR5 to initiate a variety of hepatoprotective processes. METHODS By functionally linking activation of ectopically expressed TGR5 to an artificial promoter controlling transcription of the hepatocyte growth factor (HGF), we created a closed-loop synthetic signalling network that coordinated liver injury-associated serum bile acid levels to expression of HGF in a self-sufficient, reversible and dose-dependent manner. RESULTS After implantation of genetically engineered human cells inside auto-vascularizing, immunoprotective and clinically validated alginate-poly-(L-lysine)-alginate beads into mice, the liver-protection device detected pathologic serum bile acid levels and produced therapeutic HGF levels that protected the animals from acute drug-induced liver failure. CONCLUSIONS Genetically engineered cells containing theranostic gene circuits that dynamically interface with host metabolism may provide novel opportunities for preventive, acute and chronic healthcare. LAY SUMMARY Liver diseases leading to organ failure may go unnoticed as they do not trigger any symptoms or significant discomfort. We have designed a synthetic gene circuit that senses excessive bile acid levels associated with liver injuries and automatically produces a therapeutic protein in response. When integrated into mammalian cells and implanted into mice, the circuit detects the onset of liver injuries and coordinates the production of a protein pharmaceutical which prevents liver damage.

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Background/Aims: Insulin resistance and systemic hypertension are predictors of advanced fibrosis in obese patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Genetic factors may also be important. We hypothesize that high angiotensinogen (AT) and transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) producing genotypes increase the risk of liver fibrosis in obese subjects with NAFLD. Methods: One hundred and five of 130 consecutive severely obese patients having a liver biopsy at the time of laparoscopic obesity surgery agreed to have genotype analysis. Influence of specific genotype or combination of genotypes on the stage of hepatic fibrosis was assessed after controlling for known risk factors. Results: There was no fibrosis in 70 (67%), stages 1-2 in 21 (20%) and stages 3-4 fibrosis in 14 (13%) of subjects. There was no relationship between either high AT or TGF-beta1 producing genotypes alone and hepatic fibrosis after controlling for confounding factors. However, advanced hepatic fibrosis occurred in five of 13 subjects (odds ratio 5.7, 95% confidence interval 1.5-21.2, P = 0.005) who inherited both high AT and TGF-beta1 producing polymorphisms. Conclusions: The combination of high AT and TGF-beta1 producing polymorphisms is associated with advanced hepatic fibrosis in obese patients with NAFLD. These findings support the hypothesis that angiotensin II stimulated TGF-beta1 production may promote hepatic fibrosis. (C) 2003 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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Background and aim: Obesity is a risk factor for progression of fibrosis in chronic liver diseases such as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and hepatitis C. The aim of this study was to investigate the longer term effect of weight loss on liver biochemistry, serum insulin levels, and quality of life in overweight patients with liver disease and the effect of subsequent weight maintenance or regain. Patients: Thirty one patients completed a 15 month diet and exercise intervention. Results: On completion of the intervention, 21 patients (68%) had achieved and maintained weight loss with a mean reduction of 9.4 (4.0)% body weight. Improvements in serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) levels were correlated with the amount of weight loss (r=0.35, p=0.04). In patients who maintained weight loss, mean ALT levels at 15 months remained significantly lower than values at enrolment (p=0.004), while in regainers (n=10), mean ALT levels at 15 months were no different to values at enrolment (p=0.79). Improvements in fasting serum insulin levels were also correlated with weight loss (r=0.46, p=0.04), and subsequent weight maintenance sustained this improvement. Quality of life was significantly improved after weight loss. Weight maintainers sustained recommended levels of physical activity and had higher fasting insulin levels (p=0.03) at enrolment than weight regainers. Conclusion: In summary, these findings demonstrate that maintenance of weight loss and exercise in overweight patients with liver disease results in a sustained improvement in liver enzymes, serum insulin levels, and quality of life. Treatment of overweight patients should form an important component of the management of those with chronic liver disease.

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The prevalence of fatty liver is rising in association with the global increase in obesity and type 2 diabetes. In the past, simple steatosis was regarded as benign, but the presence of another liver disease may provide a synergistic combination of steatosis, cellular adaptation, and oxidative damage that aggravates liver injury. In this review, a major focus is on the role of steatosis as a co-factor in chronic hepatitis C (HCV), where the mechanisms promoting fibrosis and the effect of weight reduction in minimizing liver injury have been most widely studied. Steatosis, obesity, and associated metabolic factors may also modulate the response to alcohol- and drug-induced liver disease and may be risk factors for the development of hepatocellular cancer. The pathogenesis of injury in obesity-related fatty liver disease involves a number of pathways, which are currently under investigation. Enhanced oxidative stress, increased susceptibility to apoptosis, and a dysregulated response to cellular injury have been implicated, and other components of the metabolic syndrome such as hyperinsulinernia and hyperglycemia are likely to have a role. Fibrosis also may be increased as a by-product of altered hepatocyte regeneration and activation of bipotential hepatic progenitor cells. In conclusion, active management of obesity and a reduction in steatosis may improve liver injury and decrease the progression of fibrosis.

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Context Randomised controlled trials in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) have shown that regular exercise, even without calorie restriction, reduces liver steatosis. A previous study has shown that 16 weeks supervised exercise training in NAFLD did not affect total VLDL kinetics. Objective To determine the effect of exercise training on intrahepatocellular fat (IHCL) and the kinetics of large triglyceride-(TG)-rich VLDL1 and smaller denser VLDL2 which has a lower TG content. Design A 16 week randomised controlled trial. Patients 27 sedentary patients with NAFLD. Intervention Supervised exercise with moderate-intensity aerobic exercise or conventional lifestyle advice (control). Main outcome Very low density lipoprotein1 (VLDL1) and VLDL2-TG and apolipoproteinB (apoB) kinetics investigated using stable isotopes before and after the intervention. Results In the exercise group VO2max increased by 31±6% (mean±SEM) and IHCL decreased from 19.6% (14.8, 30.0) to 8.9% (5.4, 17.3) (median (IQR)) with no significant change in VO2max or IHCL in the control group (change between groups p<0.001 and p=0.02, respectively). Exercise training increased VLDL1-TG and apoB fractional catabolic rates, a measure of clearance, (change between groups p=0.02 and p=0.01, respectively), and VLDL1-apoB production rate (change between groups p=0.006), with no change in VLDL1 -TG production rate. Plasma TG did not change in either group. Conclusion An increased clearance of VLDL1 may contribute to the significant decrease in liver fat following 16 weeks of exercise in NAFLD. A longer duration or higher intensity exercise interventions may be needed to lower plasma TG and VLDL production rate.

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The association between an adverse early life environment and increased susceptibility to later-life metabolic disorders such as obesity, type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease is described by the developmental origins of health and disease hypothesis. Employing a rat model of maternal high fat (MHF) nutrition, we recently reported that offspring born to MHF mothers are small at birth and develop a postnatal phenotype that closely resembles that of the human metabolic syndrome. Livers of offspring born to MHF mothers also display a fatty phenotype reflecting hepatic steatosis and characteristics of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. In the present study we hypothesised that a MHF diet leads to altered regulation of liver development in offspring; a derangement that may be detectable during early postnatal life. Livers were collected at postnatal days 2 (P2) and 27 (P27) from male offspring of control and MHF mothers (n = 8 per group). Cell cycle dynamics, measured by flow cytometry, revealed significant G0/G1 arrest in the livers of P2 offspring born to MHF mothers, associated with an increased expression of the hepatic cell cycle inhibitor Cdkn1a. In P2 livers, Cdkn1a was hypomethylated at specific CpG dinucleotides and first exon in offspring of MHF mothers and was shown to correlate with a demonstrable increase in mRNA expression levels. These modifications at P2 preceded observable reductions in liver weight and liver:brain weight ratio at P27, but there were no persistent changes in cell cycle dynamics or DNA methylation in MHF offspring at this time. Since Cdkn1a up-regulation has been associated with hepatocyte growth in pathologic states, our data may be suggestive of early hepatic dysfunction in neonates born to high fat fed mothers. It is likely that these offspring are predisposed to long-term hepatic dysfunction.

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Increased consumption of dark-coloured fruits and vegetables may mitigate metabolic syndrome. This study has determined the changes in metabolic parameters, and in cardiovascular and liver structure and function, following chronic administration of either cyanidin 3-glucoside (CG) or Queen Garnet plum juice (QG) containing cyanidin glycosides to rats fed either a corn starch (C) or a high-carbohydrate, high-fat (H) diet. Eight to nine-week-old male Wistar rats were randomly divided into six groups for 16-week feeding with C, C with CG or QG, H or H with CG or QG. C or H were supplemented with CG or QG at a dose of ∼8 mg/kg/day cyanidin glycosides from week 8 to 16. H rats developed signs of metabolic syndrome including visceral adiposity, impaired glucose tolerance, hypertension, cardiovascular remodelling, increased collagen depots in left ventricle, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, increased plasma liver enzymes and increased inflammatory cell infiltration in the heart and liver. Both CG and QG reversed these cardiovascular, liver and metabolic signs. However, no intact anthocyanins or common methylated/conjugated metabolites could be detected in the plasma samples and plasma hippuric acid concentrations were unchanged. Our results suggest CG is the most likely mediator of the responses to QG but that further investigation of the pharmacokinetics of oral CG in rats is required.

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The prevalence of variegate porphyria (VP) (2.1:100 000, in 2006 n=108) was higher in Finland than elsewhere in European countries due to a founder effect (R152C). The incidence of VP was estimated at 0.2:1 000 000 based on the number of new symptomatic patients yearly. The prevalence of porphyria cutanea tarda (PCT) was 1.2:100 000 (in 2006 n=63), which is only one fourth of the numbers reported from other European countries. The estimated incidence of PCT was 0.5:1 000 000. Based on measurements of the uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase activity in erythrocytes, the proportion of familial PCT was 49% of the cases. The prevalence of erythropoietic protoporphyria (EPP) was at 0.8:100 000 (in 2006 n=39) including asymptomatic carriers of a mutation in the ferrochelatase (FECH) gene. The incidence of EPP was estimated at 0.1:1 000 000. After 1980 the penetrance was 37% among patients with VP. Of the mutation carriers (n=57) 30% manifested with skin symptoms. Frequency of skin symptom as only clinical sign was stable before or after 1980 (22% vs. 21%), but acute attacks became infrequent (29% vs. 7%). Of the symptomatic patients 30% had both acute attacks and skin symptoms and 80% had skin symptoms. Fragility (95%) and blistering (46%) of the skin in the backs of the hands were the most common skin symptoms. Transient correction of porphyrin metabolism using eight haem arginate infusions within five weeks had no effect on the skin symptoms in three of four patients with VP. In one case skin symptoms disappeared transiently. One patient with homozygous VP had severe photosensitivity since birth. Sensory polyneuropathy, glaucoma and renal failure developed during the 25-year follow-up without the presence of acute attacks. The I12T mutation was detected in both of his alleles in the protoporphyrinogen oxidase gene. Lack of skin symptoms and infrequency of acute attacks (1/9) in the patients with I12T mutation at the heterozygous stage indicate a mild phenotype (the penetrance 11%). Four mutations (751delGAGAA, 1122delT, C286T, C343T) in the FECH gene were characterised in four of 15 families with EPP. Burning pain (96%) and swelling (92%) of the sun-exposed skin were the major skin symptoms. Hepatopathy appeared in one of 25 symptomatic patients (4%). Clinical manifestations and associated factors of PCT were similar in the sporadic and familial types of PCT. The majority of the patients with PCT had one to three precipitating factors: alcohol intake (78%), mutations in hemochromatosis associated gene (50%), use of oestrogen (25% of women) and hepatitis B or C infections (25 %). Fatty liver disease (67%) and siderosis (67%) were commonly found in their liver biopsies. The major histopathological change of the sun-exposed skin in the patients with VP (n=20), EPP (n=8) and PCT (n=5) was thickening of the vessel walls of the upper dermis suggesting that the vessel wall is the primary site of the phototoxic reaction in each type of porphyria. The fine structure of the vessel walls was similar in VP, EPP and PCT consisting of the multilayered basement membrane and excess of finely granular substance between the layers which were surrounded by the band of homogenous material. EPP was characterised by amorphous perivascular deposits extending also to the extravascular space. In direct immunofluorescence study homogenous IgG deposits in the vessel walls of the upper dermis of the sun-exposed skin were demonstrated in each type of porphyria. In EPP the excess material around vessel walls consisted of other proteins such as serum amyloid protein, and kappa and lambda light chains in addition to the basement membrane constituents such as collagen IV and laminin. These results suggest that the alterations of the vessel walls are a consequence of the repeated damage and the repairing process in the vessel wall. The microscopic alterations could be demonstrated even in the normal looking but sun-exposed skin of the patients with EPP during the symptom-free phase suggesting that vascular change can be chronic. The stability of vascular changes in the patients with PCT after treatment indicates that circulating porphyrins are not important for the maintenance of the changes.

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7 p.

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O acúmulo crônico de gordura no fígado (doença hepática gordurosa não alcoólica ou esteatose hepática não alcoólica - NAFLD) está fortemente associada com a obesidade e a resistência à insulina. O estudo teve como objetivo investigar o efeito do exercício físico (natação) na redução da esteatose hepática e comorbidades associadas, incluindo a expressão hepática de síntese de ácidos graxos e receptor proliferador de peroxissoma atividade alfa. Camundongos machos C57BL/6 foram divididos em dois grandes grupos de acordo com a dieta durante 22 semanas: dieta padrão (10% de gordura, SC) ou dieta rica em gordura (60% de gordura, HF), caracterizando os grupos sedentários SC-Sed e HF-Sed. Nas últimas 10 semanas do experimento, metade dos grupos sedentários foram submetidos ao protocolo de natação com um aumento progressivo no tempo (6/dia até 60/dia, 5x/semana), caracterizando os grupos exercitados: SC-Ex e HF-Ex. No final do experimento, comparado ao grupo SC-Sed, o grupo HF-Sed teve a massa corporal significativamente superior, hiperglicemia, hiperinsulinemia com resistência à insulina, hipertrofia dos adipócitos (com infiltrado inflamatório), hipertrofia das ilhotas pancreáticas, dislipidemia, alteração das enzimas hepáticas e inflamatórias e NAFLD com mudanças na expressão de proteínas hepáticas lipogênicas e oxidativas. O programa de natação, mesmo concomitante com a dieta rica em gordura, reduziu o excesso de peso e todos os outros resultados, especialmente a NAFLD. Os resultados permitem concluir que a natação pode atenuar os efeitos deletérios de uma dieta rica em gorduras combinado com estilo de vida sedentário em camundongos. Estes dados reforçam a idéia que o exercício físico pode ser considerado uma estratégia terapêutica não farmacológica eficaz no tratamento da NAFLD, obesidade e resistência à insulina.

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Camundongos C57BL/6 machos com oito semanas de idade alimentados com diferentes dietas durante 16 semanas: de alta densidade energética (ADE, 26% das calorias de carboidrato, 60% de gordura e 14% de proteína) ou dieta padrão (CO, 76% das calorias de carboidrato, 10% de gordura e 14% de proteína). Comparado ao grupo CO, o grupo ADE apresentou maior ganho de massa e maior depósito de tecido adiposo, bem como maiores níveis plasmáticos de triglicerídeos, LDL-c, ALT, AST e fosfatase alcalina e com maiores níveis de corticosterona plasmática, glicose de jejum e insulina com uma consequente resistência à insulina (avaliado pelo HOMA-IR). No TOTG, a glicose plasmática aumentou ao máximo após 15 min. da administração de glicose oral em ambos os grupos. Entretanto os níveis de glicose foram maiores no grupo ADE que no grupo CO (P<0.0001). O clearance de glicose no grupo ADE foi reduzido, permanecendo aumentado após 120 min. (P<0.001), caracterizando intolerância a glicose no grupo ADE. O teste intraperitoneal de tolerância à insulina mostrou uma rápida redução na glicose plasmática após 15 minutos da administração de insulina em ambos os grupos, mas significativamente aumentada no grupo ADE (P<0.0001), permanecendo desta forma até os 120 min. após a administração. Concluindo, camundongos C57BL/6 respondem a dieta ADE desenvolvimento os sinais e sintomas associados à síndrome metabólica observada em humanos. Por conseguinte, este modelo animal poderá ajudar-nos a compreender melhor as alterações em órgãos alvos associadas com a síndrome metabólica, assim como a possibilidade de tratamentos diferentes.

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O estado nutricional e hormonal em fases iniciais de desenvolvimento (gestação e lactação) está relacionado a alterações epigenéticas, que podem levar ao desenvolvimento de doenças. A obesidade infantil está relacionada com a ocorrência da obesidade na idade adulta, resistência à insulina e maior risco cardiometabólico. Em estudos experimentais, a superalimentação neonatal causa obesidade e aumenta o risco de doenças cardiovasculares. Estes animais apresentam obesidade visceral, hiperfagia, hiperleptinemia e hipertensão na idade adulta. Previamente, demonstramos que a hiperleptinemia neonatal causa hiperfunção da medula adrenal e microesteatose na idade adulta. No presente estudo avaliamos a função adrenal de ratos adultos obesos no modelo de superalimentação neonatal por redução do tamanho da ninhada e a sensibilidade as catecolaminas no tecido adiposo visceral (TAV) e no fígado. Ao nascimento todas as ninhadas tiveram seu número de filhotes ajustados para 10. Para induzir a superalimentação neonatal, o tamanho da ninhada foi reduzido de dez para três filhotes machos no terceiro dia de lactação até o desmame (SA), enquanto que o grupo controle permaneceu com 10 filhotes durante toda a lactação. Após o desmame, os ratos tiveram livre acesso à dieta padrão e água até 180 dias (1 animal de cada ninhada, n = 7). O TAV e as glândulas adrenais foram pesadas. As contrações hormonais séricas, o conteúdo hepático de glicogênio e triglicerídeos foram avaliados por kits comerciais. O conteúdo e a secreção de catecolaminas adrenais foram avaliados utilizando o método do trihidroxindol. O conteúdo dos hormônios eixo hipotálamo-hipófise-córtex adrenal, das enzimas da via de síntese das catecolaminas na glândula adrenal, ADRB2 no fígado e ADRB3 no TAV foram determinados por Western blotting ou imunohistoquímica. As diferenças foram consideradas significativas quando p <0,05. Aos 180 dias de vida, o grupo SA apresentou maior massa corporal (+15%), maior consumo alimentar (+15%) e maior adiposidade visceral (+79%). Os hormônios do eixo hipotálamo-hipófise-córtex-adrenal não foram alterados. O grupo SA apresentou maior expressão de tirosina hidroxilase e de DOPA descarboxilase (+31% e 90%, respectivamente); conteúdo de catecolaminas adrenais (absoluta: 35% e relativa: 40%), e secreção de catecolaminas, tanto basal quanto estimulada por cafeína (+35% e 43%, respectivamente). O conteúdo ADRB3 no TAV não foi alterado nos grupo SA, entretanto o ADRB2 no fígado apresentou-se menor (-45%). O grupo SA apresentou maior conteúdo de glicogênio e triglicerídeos no fígado (+79% e +49%, respectivamente), além de microesteatose. A superalimentação neonatal resulta em hiperativação adrenomedular e aparentemente está associada a preservação da sensibilidade às catecolaminas no VAT. Adicionalmente sugerimos que o maior conteúdo de glicogênio e triglicerídeos hepático seja devido a menor sensibilidade as catecolaminas. Tal perfil pode contribuir para a disfunção metabólica hepática e hipertensão arterial que são características deste modelo de obesidade programada.