Abstract

Tsumura-Suzuki non-obese (TSNO) mice exhibit a severe form of metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) with advanced liver fibrosis upon feeding a high-fat/cholesterol/cholate-based (iHFC) diet. Another ddY strain, Tsumura-Suzuki diabetes obese (TSOD) mice, are impaired in the progression of iHFC diet-induced MASH. To elucidate the underlying mechanisms contributing to the differences in MASH progression between TSNO and TSOD mice. We analyzed differences in the immune system, gut microbiota, and bile acid metabolism in TSNO and TSOD mice fed with a normal diet (ND) or an iHFC diet. TSOD mice had more anti-inflammatory macrophages in the liver than TSNO mice under ND feeding, and were impaired in the iHFC diet-induced accumulation of fibrosis-associated macrophages and formation of histological hepatic crown-like structures in the liver. The gut microbiota of TSOD mice also exhibited a distinct community composition with lower diversity and higher abundance of Akkermansia muciniphila compared with that in TSNO mice. Finally, TSOD mice had lower levels of bile acids linked to intestinal barrier disruption under iHFC feeding. The dynamics of liver macrophage subsets, and the compositions of the gut microbiota and bile acids at steady state and post-onset of MASH, had major impacts on MASH development.

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