Abstract Disclosure: M. Tripathi: None. S. Sakthivel: None. A. Suzuki: None. B.K. Singh: None. P.M. Yen: None. Introduction: NAFLD (nonalcoholic fatty liver disease) and its more severe form, NASH (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) are sexually dimorphic conditions that exhibit higher prevalence in men than women during reproductive ages but have similar prevalence after menopause. Reproductive age women are protected from hepatic fibrosis relative to men, although they lose this protection after menopause. These sex differences in NASH have been attributed, at least partly, to different circulating estrogen levels. However, the underlying mechanism(s) is not fully understood. We thus conducted animal experiments to investigate: 1) sex differences in the histologic severity of NASH, necroinflammatory and fibrogenic activities, and other relevant pathways in young and old male and female mice and 2) the effects of estradiol administration on these parameters in old male and female mice to evaluate the therapeutic potential of estradiol in NASH. Methodology: Young/reproductive age (12-weeks old) and old/post-reproductive age female and male (48∼50-weeks weeks old) C57BL/6J mice were fed control chow diet (NCD) or high-fat methionine/choline-deficient (MCD) diet for six weeks to induce NASH. The old mice were administered 200nM 17β-estradiol (physiological) in drinking water. We analyzed serum and hepatic NASH parameters, ER stress, and lysosome-autophagy defects. Results and Conclusion: Among reproductive age mice with NASH, females developed less severe histologic inflammation and fibrosis and decreased gene expression of Il1b, Il6, Tgfb, Col1a1, Ccl2, and Ccl5, and lower hepatic collagen than males. Females with NASH also had less inhibition of hepatic autophagy and lysosomal protein expression than males with NASH. Among old mice, post-reproductive age females fed NCD or MCD exhibited more severe hepatic inflammation and fibrosis and had higher gene expression of inflammatory and fibrogenic markers with comparable autophagic inhibition and lysosomal defects as similar age males. Physiological doses of estradiol significantly reduced hepatic gene expression of inflammatory and fibrogenic markers, ER stress and lysosomal-autophagic defects in post-reproductive age females. In conclusion, similar to clinical NASH, we observed marked sex and age-related differences in the severity of NASH. Furthermore, physiological doses of estradiol treatment improved the hepatic histology, lysosome-autophagy, inflammation, and fibrosis in post-reproductive age female mice with NASH and suggests that estradiol supplementation may decrease or reverse NASH progression in post-menopausal women with NASH. Presentation: 6/2/2024