Abstract

A combination of Opisthorchis viverrini infection and high fat/high fructose diets (HFa/HFr) intake is likely to enhance fatty liver and kidney pathologies. Here we investigated the combined effects of chronic O. viverrini infection and HFa/HFr intake on liver and kidney pathologies, metabolism, and gut microbiome in hamsters. Animals were infected with O. viverrini and fed with either standard chow (OV group) or HFa/HFr diet (OH group) and non–infected hamsters were fed with either standard chow (NC) or HFa/HFr diet (HF) for 8 months. The OH group exhibited dyslipidemia and the highest severity of fatty liver. Tubular damage, inflammatory cell infiltration, and tubular fibrosis were the most prominently observed in this group, supported by increased expression of KIM-1, HMGB-1, and MCP-1. Urinary 1H NMR metabolic profiles revealed that tauro-β-muricholic acid level was increased in the OV and OH groups, whereas metabolites involved in the TCA cycle and gut microbiota-associated metabolites (phenylacetylglycine, trimethylamine, and trimethylamine-N-oxide) were lower in OV, HF and OH groups compared to the NC group. Gut microbial profiles of the OH group were also different from other groups. In conclusion, O. viverrini infection and HFa/HFr diet-induced disturbance of metabolites and gut microbiota associated with concurrent liver and kidney pathologies in hamsters.

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