Issue 2, 2016

Anti-steatotic and anti-inflammatory roles of syringic acid in high-fat diet-induced obese mice

Abstract

This study examined the effects of syringic acid (SA) on obese diet-induced hepatic dysfunction. Mice were fed high-fat diet (HFD) with or without SA (0.05%, wt/wt) for 16 weeks. SA reduced the body weight, visceral fat mass, serum levels of leptin, TNFα, IFNγ, IL-6 and MCP-1, insulin resistance, hepatic lipid content, droplets and early fibrosis, whereas it elevated the circulation of adiponectin. SA down-regulated lipogenic genes (Cidea, Pparγ, Srebp-1c, Srebp-2, Hmgcr, Fasn) and inflammatory genes (Tlr4, Myd88, NF-κB, Tnfα, Il6), whereas it up-regulated fatty acid oxidation genes (Pparα, Acsl, Cpt1, Cpt2) in the liver. SA also decreased hepatic lipogenic enzyme activities and elevated fatty acid oxidation enzyme activities relative to the HFD group. These findings suggested that dietary SA possesses anti-obesity, anti-inflammatory and anti-steatotic effects via the regulation of lipid metabolic and inflammatory genes. SA is likely to be a new natural therapeutic agent for obesity or non-alcoholic liver disease.

Graphical abstract: Anti-steatotic and anti-inflammatory roles of syringic acid in high-fat diet-induced obese mice

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Nov 2015
Accepted
10 Jan 2016
First published
11 Jan 2016

Food Funct., 2016,7, 689-697

Anti-steatotic and anti-inflammatory roles of syringic acid in high-fat diet-induced obese mice

J. R. Ham, H. Lee, R. Choi, M. Sim, K. Seo and M. Lee, Food Funct., 2016, 7, 689 DOI: 10.1039/C5FO01329A

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