Dietary Flaxseed Oil Prevents Western-Type Diet-Induced Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Apolipoprotein-E Knockout Mice.
Hao HanFubin QiuHaifeng ZhaoHaiying TangXiuhua LiDongxing ShiPublished in: Oxidative medicine and cellular longevity (2017)
The prevalence of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has dramatically increased globally during recent decades. Intake of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs), mainly eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, C20:5n-3) and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, C22:6n-3), is believed to be beneficial to the development of NAFLD. However, little information is available with regard to the effect of flaxseed oil rich in α-linolenic acid (ALA, C18:3n-3), a plant-derived n-3 PUFA, in improving NAFLD. This study was to gain the effect of flaxseed oil on NAFLD and further investigate the underlying mechanisms. Apolipoprotein-E knockout (apoE-KO) mice were given a normal chow diet, a western-type high-fat and high-cholesterol diet (WTD), or a WTD diet containing 10% flaxseed oil (WTD + FO) for 12 weeks. Our data showed that consumption of flaxseed oil significantly improved WTD-induced NAFLD, as well as ameliorated impaired lipid homeostasis, attenuated oxidative stress, and inhibited inflammation. These data were associated with the modification effects on expression levels of genes involved in de novo fat synthesis (SREBP-1c, ACC), triacylglycerol catabolism (PPARα, CPT1A, and ACOX1), inflammation (NF-κB, IL-6, TNF-α, and MCP-1), and oxidative stress (ROS, MDA, GSH, and SOD).
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- fatty acid
- diabetic rats
- dna damage
- physical activity
- weight loss
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- adipose tissue
- electronic health record
- poor prognosis
- signaling pathway
- south africa
- cognitive decline
- induced apoptosis
- metabolic syndrome
- big data
- mouse model
- healthcare
- risk factors
- machine learning
- liver fibrosis
- mild cognitive impairment
- inflammatory response
- breast cancer cells
- high fat diet induced
- long non coding rna
- wild type
- nuclear factor
- low density lipoprotein