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Alleviation of High-Fat Diet-Induced Fatty Liver Damage in Group IVA Phospholipase A2-Knockout Mice
Authors:Hiromi Ii  Naoki Yokoyama  Shintaro Yoshida  Kae Tsutsumi  Shinji Hatakeyama  Takashi Sato  Keiichi Ishihara  Satoshi Akiba
Institution:1. Department of Pathological Biochemistry, Kyoto Pharmaceutical University, Yamashina-ku, Kyoto, Japan.; 2. Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, Tsukuba, Japan.;Mayo Clinic, United States of America
Abstract:Hepatic fat deposition with hepatocellular damage, a feature of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, is mediated by several putative factors including prostaglandins. In the present study, we examined whether group IVA phospholipase A2 (IVA-PLA2), which catalyzes the first step in prostanoid biosynthesis, is involved in the development of fatty liver, using IVA-PLA2-knockout mice. Male wild-type mice on high-fat diets (20% fat and 1.25% cholesterol) developed hepatocellular vacuolation and liver hypertrophy with an increase in the serum levels of liver damage marker aminotransferases when compared with wild-type mice fed normal diets. These high-fat diet-induced alterations were markedly decreased in IVA-PLA2-knockout mice. Hepatic triacylglycerol content was lower in IVA-PLA2-knockout mice than in wild-type mice under normal dietary conditions. Although high-fat diets increased hepatic triacylglycerol content in both genotypes, the degree was lower in IVA-PLA2-knockout mice than in wild-type mice. Under the high-fat dietary conditions, IVA-PLA2-knockout mice had lower epididymal fat pad weight and smaller adipocytes than wild-type mice. The serum level of prostaglandin E2, which has a fat storage effect, was lower in IVA-PLA2-knockout mice than in wild-type mice, irrespective of the kind of diet. In both genotypes, high-fat diets increased serum leptin levels equally between the two groups, but did not affect the serum levels of adiponectin, resistin, free fatty acid, triacylglycerol, glucose, or insulin. Our findings suggest that a deficiency of IVA-PLA2 alleviates fatty liver damage caused by high-fat diets, probably because of the lower generation of IVA-PLA2 metabolites, such as prostaglandin E2. IVA-PLA2 could be a promising therapeutic target for obesity-related diseases including non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
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