Co-exposure to different bacterial species' lipopolysaccharides with the NASH diet exacerbates NASH and liver fibrosis progression in mice.

Category Primary study
JournalClinics and research in hepatology and gastroenterology
Year 2024
BACKGROUND AND AIM: With the obesity epidemic, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) has become a public health concern, but its progression mechanism remains unclear. Experimental models mimicking human NAFLD/steatohepatitis (NASH) are crucial. This study simulates gut microbiota imbalance effects on NASH and liver fibrosis. METHODS: We used different bacterial sources of lipopolysaccharide (LPS), including Escherichia coli (GEC) and Salmonella abortus equi (GSE), combined with a Gubra Amylin NASH (GAN) diet to induce NASH and liver fibrosis. RESULTS: The GSE group showed significantly higher serum alanine aminotransferase, hydroxyproline, CD68-positive cells, α-smooth muscle actin, glial fibrillary acidic protein, and TNF-α, COL1A1, TGF-β, and NLRP3 expressions compared to the the GAN group. The GSE group also had higher Erysipelotrichaceae, Akkermansiaceae, and Bacteroidaceae family numbers. CONCLUSIONS: The GAN diet with LPS treatment successfully induced NASH and fibrosis making this model useful for preclinical NASH drug testing.
Epistemonikos ID: a348dbdfafa54049c9edf3c03ee277718cb80222
First added on: Jun 09, 2025