Abstract

Shaofu Zhuyu decoction (SFZYD, also known as Sobokchugeo-tang), a classical prescription drug in traditional East Asian medicine, has been used to treat blood stasis syndrome (BSS). Hepatic steatosis is the result of excess caloric intake, and its pathogenesis involves internal retention of phlegm and dampness, blood stasis, and liver Qi stagnation. To evaluate the effects of treatment with SFZYD on obesity-induced inflammation and hepatic steatosis, we fed male C57BL/6N mice a high fat diet (HFD) for 8 weeks and then treated them with SFZYD by oral gavage for an additional 4 weeks. The results of histological and biochemical examinations indicated that SFZYD treatment ameliorates systemic inflammation and hepatic steatosis. A partial least squares-discriminant analysis (PLS-DA) scores plot of serum metabolites showed that HFD mice began to produce metabolites similar to those of normal chow (NC) mice after SFZYD administration. We noted significant alterations in the levels of twenty-seven metabolites, alterations indicating that SFZYD regulates the TCA cycle, the pentose phosphate pathway and aromatic amino acid metabolism. Increases in the levels of TCA cycle intermediate metabolites, such as 2-oxoglutaric acid, isocitric acid, and malic acid, in the serum of obese mice were significantly reversed after SFZYD treatment. In addition to inducing changes in the above metabolites, treatment with SFZYD also recovered the expression of genes related to hepatic mitochondrial dysfunction, including Ucp2, Cpt1α, and Ppargc1α, as well as the expression of genes involved in lipid metabolism and inflammation, without affecting glucose uptake or insulin signaling. Taken together, these findings suggest that treatment with SFZYD ameliorated obesity-induced systemic inflammation and hepatic steatosis by regulating inflammatory cytokine and adipokine levels in the circulation and various tissues. Moreover, treatment with SFZYD also reversed alterations in the levels of metabolites of the TCA cycle, the pentose phosphate pathway and aromatic amino acid metabolism.

Highlights

  • Traditional East Asian medicines have long been used to treat various diseases

  • Consistent with this result, the results of the histological analysis of the liver showed that lipid droplet accumulation in hepatocytes was decreased by SFZYD treatment in the indicated group compared to the normal chow (NC) group (Fig 2C)

  • The post-SFZYD treatment level of unconverted leptin in the serum of high fat diet (HFD)-fed mice was lower than the corresponding level in untreated HFD-fed mice, and the difference in the level was indicative of differences in stationary body fat, epididymal fat, and subcutaneous fat weight between the two groups (Fig 2D, Table 1)

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Summary

Introduction

Traditional East Asian medicines have long been used to treat various diseases. These treatment modalities are designed to heal a person through a holistic approach and to balance internal vital energy. Herbal remedies consist of various natural herbs, minerals, and animal products, and each of these elements contains a variety of chemical compounds [1], each of which can target different causes of disease progression. Shaofu Zhuyu decoction (SFZYD, Sobokchugeo-tang in Korean) is used as a blood stasis syndrome (BSS) remedy in traditional Korean medicine (TKM) and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM). In traditional East Asian medicine, BSS has reportedly been linked to disturbances in blood circulation and microcirculation, changes in blood physical and chemical properties, abnormal tissue hyperplasia, endothelial cell dysfunction, metabolic disorders, inflammation, and immune dysfunction [4]. We recently demonstrated that Tongqiaohuoxue (THD) decoction, which is used to treat blood stasis and hypercoagulation in traditional medicine, ameliorates obesity-induced inflammation and prothrombotic states [5], and emerging evidence indicates that BSS remedies have anti-inflammatory properties and primary effects in blood stasis

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