Abstract

Multifactorial pathogenesis of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) disease, a wide-spread liver pathology associated with metabolic alterations triggered by hepatic steatosis, should be hit by multitarget therapeutics. We tested a multicomponent food supplement mixture (AP-NHm), whose components have anti-dislipidemic, antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, on in vitro and in vivo models of NASH. In vitro, hepatic cells cultures were treated for 24 h with 0.5 mM oleic acid (OA): in the co-treatment set cells were co-treated with AP-NH mixtures (AP-NHm, 1:3:10 ratio) and in the post-injury set AP-NHm was added for 48 h after OA damage. In vivo, C57BL/6 mice were fed with high-fat diet (HFD) for 12 weeks, inducing NASH at 7th week, and treated with AP-NHm at two dosages (1:3 ratio) in co-treatment or post-injury protocols, while a control group was fed with a standard diet. In in vitro co-treatment protocol, alterations of redox balance, proinflammatory cytokines release and glucose uptake were restored in a dose-dependent manner, at highest dosages also in post-injury regimen. In both regimens, pathologic dyslipidemias were also ameliorated by AP-NHm. In vivo, high-dose-AP-NHm-co-treated-HFD mice dose-dependently gained less body weight, were protected from dyslipidemia, and showed a lower liver weight. Dose-dependently, AP-NHm treatment lowered hepatic LDL, HDL, triglycerides levels and oxidative damage; co-treatment regimen was anti-inflammatory, reducing TNF-α and IL-8 levels. Hepatic lipidic infiltration significantly decreased in co-treated and post-injury-AP-NHm-HFD animals. The multitarget approach with AP-NHm was effective in preventing and reducing NASH-related pathologic features, warranting for the clinical development of this compound.

Highlights

  • Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a chronic liver disease which is not associated with excessive alcohol consumption and whose worldwide prevalence is estimated to be 25%, with regional and sex-related differences [1,2,3]

  • Enzymatic methods applied to commercial kit were used to perform specific quantitative measurements (BioSource, Italy)

  • Blood was collected from the facial vein of the mice under light ether anesthesia into Eppendorf tubes containing heparin (20 μL, 25,000 IU/5 mL) weekly starting from week 1

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Summary

Introduction

Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a chronic liver disease which is not associated with excessive alcohol consumption and whose worldwide prevalence is estimated to be 25%, with regional and sex-related differences [1,2,3]. In one third of cases it may progress to a more severe liver pathology termed non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), associated with inflammation, cell injury, hepatocyte ballooning, and liver fibrosis [4,5]. Release of pro-inflammatory cytokines starts a feed-forward loop of inflammation which makes it chronic and leads to hepatic tissue remodeling and fibrosis. In this pathological picture, oxidative stress, mitochondrial dysfunction, and insulin resistance are the main players [4]. Despite the significant burden of this pathology, no therapy was approved by Federal Drug Administration (FDA) or European Medicines

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