A Combination of Leucine, Metformin, and Sildenafil Treats Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease and Steatohepatitis in Mice.
Antje BruckbauerJheelam BanerjeeLizhi FuFenfen LiQiang CaoXin CuiRui WuHang ShiBingzhong XueMichael B ZemelPublished in: International journal of hepatology (2016)
Sirt1, AMPK, and eNOS modulate hepatic energy metabolism and inflammation and are key players in the development of NASH. L-leucine, an allosteric Sirt1 activator, synergizes with low doses of metformin or sildenafil on the AMPK-eNOS-Sirt1 pathway to reverse mild NAFLD in preclinical mouse models. Here we tested a possible multicomponent synergy to yield greater therapeutic efficacy in NAFLD/NASH. Liver cells and macrophages or an atherogenic diet induced NASH mouse model was treated with two-way and three-way combinations. The three-way combination Sild-Met-Leu increased hepatic fatty acid oxidation and reduced lipogenic gene expression and inflammatory marker in vitro. In mice, Sild-Met-Leu reduced the diet induced increases of ALT, TGFβ, PAI-1, IL1β, and TNFα, hepatic collagen expression, and nearly completely reversed hepatocyte ballooning and triglyceride accumulation, while all two-way combinations had only modest effects. Therefore, these data provide preclinical evidence for therapeutic efficacy of Sild-Met-Leu in the treatment of NAFLD and NASH.
Keyphrases
- mouse model
- oxidative stress
- gene expression
- induced apoptosis
- tyrosine kinase
- fatty acid
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- pulmonary hypertension
- high fat diet induced
- skeletal muscle
- pi k akt
- endothelial cells
- pulmonary arterial hypertension
- poor prognosis
- cell cycle arrest
- nitric oxide synthase
- dna methylation
- small molecule
- hydrogen peroxide
- cell therapy
- electronic health record
- transforming growth factor
- liver fibrosis
- protein kinase
- nitric oxide
- big data
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- long non coding rna
- liver injury
- immune response
- binding protein
- bone marrow
- toll like receptor
- data analysis
- tissue engineering
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- adipose tissue