Polyphenol-Rich Loquat Fruit Extract Prevents Fructose-Induced Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease by Modulating Glycometabolism, Lipometabolism, Oxidative Stress, Inflammation, Intestinal Barrier, and Gut Microbiota in Mice.
Wenfeng LiHongyan YangQiang ZhaoXv WangJing ZhangXin ZhaoPublished in: Journal of agricultural and food chemistry (2019)
Fructose as a daily sweetener is widely recognized as a risk catalyst for nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). The aim of current study is to evaluate the effects and molecular mechanism by which polyphenol-rich loquat fruit extract (LFP) prevents NAFLD in mice fed 30% fructose water (HF) for 8 weeks. Administration of LFP to HF-fed mice mitigated abnormal body weight, disordered lipid metabolism, oxidative stress, and inflammation through a mechanism regulated by the AKT, ChREBP/SREBP-1c, Nrf2, and TLR4/MyD88/TRIF pathways. LFP caused a significant decrease in the endotoxin content (16.67-12.7 EU/mL) in the liver of HF-fed mice. LFP not only improved HF-induced breakage of the intestinal barrier via interacting with tight junction proteins (ZO-1, occludin), mucin, and immunoreaction in the colon but also maintained normal colonic Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratios and the relative abundance of Veillonella in HF-fed mice. Our results suggest that LFP may serve as a nutritional agent for protecting liver in HF-fed mice.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- high fat diet induced
- diabetic rats
- body weight
- dna damage
- insulin resistance
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- type diabetes
- high glucose
- wild type
- heart failure
- signaling pathway
- blood brain barrier
- inflammatory response
- physical activity
- metabolic syndrome
- endothelial cells
- atrial fibrillation
- skeletal muscle
- fatty acid
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- wastewater treatment
- heat stress