Imipramine Accelerates Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease, Renal Impairment, Diabetic Retinopathy, Insulin Resistance, and Urinary Chromium Loss in Obese Mice.
Geng-Ruei ChangPo-Hsun HouChao-Ming WangJen-Wei LinWei-Li LinTzu-Chun LinHuei-Jyuan LiaoChee-Hong ChanYu-Chen WangPublished in: Veterinary sciences (2021)
Imipramine is a tricyclic antidepressant that has been approved for treating depression and anxiety in patients and animals and that has relatively mild side effects. However, the mechanisms of imipramine-associated disruption to metabolism and negative hepatic, renal, and retinal effects are not well defined. In this study, we evaluated C57BL6/J mice subjected to a high-fat diet (HFD) to study imipramine's influences on obesity, fatty liver scores, glucose homeostasis, hepatic damage, distribution of chromium, and retinal/renal impairments. Obese mice receiving imipramine treatment had higher body, epididymal fat pad, and liver weights; higher serum triglyceride, aspartate and alanine aminotransferase, creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, renal antioxidant enzyme, and hepatic triglyceride levels; higher daily food efficiency; and higher expression levels of a marker of fatty acid regulation in the liver compared with the controls also fed an HFD. Furthermore, the obese mice that received imipramine treatment exhibited insulin resistance, worse glucose intolerance, decreased glucose transporter 4 expression and Akt phosphorylation levels, and increased chromium loss through urine. In addition, the treatment group exhibited considerably greater liver damage and higher fatty liver scores, paralleling the increases in patatin-like phospholipid domain containing protein 3 and the mRNA levels of sterol regulatory element-binding protein 1 and fatty acid-binding protein 4. Retinal injury worsened in imipramine-treated mice; decreases in retinal cell layer organization and retinal thickness and increases in nuclear factor κB and inducible nitric oxide synthase levels were observed. We conclude that administration of imipramine may result in the exacerbation of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease, diabetes, diabetic retinopathy, and kidney injury.
Keyphrases
- diabetic retinopathy
- high fat diet
- insulin resistance
- optical coherence tomography
- binding protein
- fatty acid
- high fat diet induced
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- metabolic syndrome
- nuclear factor
- nitric oxide
- nitric oxide synthase
- optic nerve
- blood glucose
- oxidative stress
- newly diagnosed
- chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
- poor prognosis
- toll like receptor
- transcription factor
- intensive care unit
- single cell
- weight loss
- body mass index
- small molecule
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- cell therapy
- bone marrow
- major depressive disorder
- weight gain
- smoking cessation
- immune response
- long non coding rna
- uric acid
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- protein kinase
- inflammatory response
- replacement therapy