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  4. SMN Depleted Mice Offer a Robust and Rapid Onset Model of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease
 
research article

SMN Depleted Mice Offer a Robust and Rapid Onset Model of Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease

Deguise, Marc-Olivier
•
Pileggi, Chantal
•
De Repentigny, Yves
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January 1, 2021
Cellular And Molecular Gastroenterology And Hepatology

BACKGROUND & AIMS: Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is considered a health epidemic with potential devastating effects on the patients and the healthcare systems. Current preclinical models of NAFLD are invariably imperfect and generally take a long time to develop. A mouse model of survival motor neuron (SMN) depletion (Smn(2B/-) mice) was recently shown to develop significant hepatic steatosis in less than 2 weeks from birth. The rapid onset of fatty liver in Smn(2B/-) mice provides an opportunity to identify molecular markers of NAFLD. Here, we investigated whether Smn(2B/-) mice display typical features of NAFLD/nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). METHODS: Biochemical, histologic, electron microscopy, proteomic, and high-resolution respirometry were used. RESULTS: The Smn(2B/-) mice develop microvesicular steatohepatitis within 2 weeks, a feature prevented by AAV9-SMN gene therapy. Although fibrosis is not overtly apparent in histologic sections of the liver, there is molecular evidence of fibrogenesis and presence of stellate cell activation. The consequent liver damage arises from mitochondrial reactive oxygen species production and results in hepatic dysfunction in protein output, complement, coagulation, iron homeostasis, and insulin-like growth factor-1 metabolism. The NAFLD phenotype is likely due to non-esterified fatty acid overload from peripheral lipolysis subsequent to hyperglucagonemia compounded by reduced muscle use and insulin resistance. Despite the low hepatic mitochondrial content, isolated mitochondria show enhanced beta-oxidation, likely as a compensatory response, resulting in the production of reactive oxygen species. In contrast to typical NAFLD/NASH, the Smn(2B/-) mice lose weight because of their associated neurological condition (spinal muscular atrophy) and develop hypoglycemia. CONCLUSIONS: The Smn(2B/-) mice represent a good model of microvesicular steatohepatitis. Like other models, it is not representative of the complete NAFLD/NASH spectrum. Nevertheless, it offers a reliable, low-cost, early-onset model that is not dependent on diet to identify molecular players in NAFLD pathogenesis and can serve as one of the very few models of microvesicular steatohepatitis for both adult and pediatric populations.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1016/j.jcmgh.2021.01.019
Web of Science ID

WOS:000680862600021

Author(s)
Deguise, Marc-Olivier
Pileggi, Chantal
De Repentigny, Yves
Beauvais, Ariane
Tierney, Alexandra
Chehade, Lucia
Michaud, Jean
Llavero-Hurtado, Maica
Lamont, Douglas
Atrih, Abdelmadjid
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Date Issued

2021-01-01

Published in
Cellular And Molecular Gastroenterology And Hepatology
Volume

12

Issue

1

Start page

354

End page
Subjects

Gastroenterology & Hepatology

•

Gastroenterology & Hepatology

•

smn

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nafld

•

nash

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metabolism

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muscular-atrophy phenotype

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mouse-model

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mitochondrial dysfunction

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animal-models

•

steatohepatitis

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iron

•

steatosis

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defects

•

network

•

insulin

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

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Available on Infoscience
August 14, 2021
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/180678
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