Neuhofer Angelika, Wernly Bernhard, Leitner Lukas, Sarabi Alisina, Sommer Nicole G, Staffler Günther, Zeyda Maximilian, Stulnig Thomas M
Christian Doppler Laboratory for Cardio-Metabolic Immunotherapy and Clinical Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Medicine III, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
Cardiovasc Diabetol. 2014 Jan 17;13:23. doi: 10.1186/1475-2840-13-23.
Obesity and particularly the metabolic syndrome, which is often associated with obesity, combine a major risk for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. Emerging evidence indicate obesity-associated subclinical inflammation primarily originating from adipose tissue as a common cause for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease. However, a suitable and well-characterized mouse model to simultaneously study obesity-associated metabolic disorders and atherosclerosis is not available yet. Here we established and characterized a murine model combining diet-induced obesity and associated adipose tissue inflammation and metabolic deteriorations as well as atherosclerosis, hence reflecting the human situation of cardio-metabolic disease.
We compared a common high-fat diet with 0.15% cholesterol (HFC), and a high-fat, high-sucrose diet with 0.15% cholesterol (HFSC) fed to LDL receptor-deficient (LDLR-/-) mice. Insulin resistance, glucose tolerance, atherosclerotic lesion formation, hepatic lipid accumulation, and inflammatory gene expression in adipose tissue and liver were assessed.
After 12-16 weeks, LDLR-/- mice fed HFSC or HFC developed significant diet-induced obesity, adipose tissue inflammation, insulin resistance, and impaired glucose tolerance compared to lean controls. Notably, HFSC-fed mice developed significantly higher adipose tissue inflammation in parallel with significantly elevated atherosclerotic lesion area compared to those on HFC. Moreover, LDLR-/- mice on HFSC showed increased insulin resistance and impaired glucose tolerance relative to those on HFC. After prolonged feeding (20 weeks), however, no significant differences in inflammatory and metabolic parameters as well as atherosclerotic lesion formation were detectable any more between LDLR-/- mice fed HFSC or HFC.
The use of high sucrose rather than more complex carbohydrates in high-fat diets significantly accelerates development of obesity-driven metabolic complications and atherosclerotic plaque formation parallel to obesity-induced adipose tissue inflammation in LDLR-/- mice. Hence LDLR-/- mice fed high-fat high-sucrose cholesterol-enriched diet appear to be a suitable and time-saving animal model for cardio-metabolic disease. Moreover our results support the suggested interrelation between adipose tissue inflammation and atherosclerotic plaque formation.
肥胖尤其是代谢综合征,常与肥胖相关,是2型糖尿病和心血管疾病的主要危险因素。新出现的证据表明,主要起源于脂肪组织的肥胖相关亚临床炎症是2型糖尿病和心血管疾病的常见病因。然而,目前尚无一种合适且特征明确的小鼠模型可同时用于研究肥胖相关的代谢紊乱和动脉粥样硬化。在此,我们建立并表征了一种小鼠模型,该模型结合了饮食诱导的肥胖、相关脂肪组织炎症和代谢恶化以及动脉粥样硬化,从而反映了人类心脏代谢疾病的情况。
我们将含0.15%胆固醇的普通高脂饮食(HFC)与喂给低密度脂蛋白受体缺陷(LDLR-/-)小鼠的含0.15%胆固醇的高脂高糖饮食(HFSC)进行了比较。评估了胰岛素抵抗、葡萄糖耐量、动脉粥样硬化病变形成、肝脏脂质积累以及脂肪组织和肝脏中炎症基因的表达。
12 - 16周后,与瘦对照组相比,喂食HFSC或HFC的LDLR-/-小鼠出现了显著的饮食诱导性肥胖、脂肪组织炎症、胰岛素抵抗和葡萄糖耐量受损。值得注意的是,与喂食HFC的小鼠相比,喂食HFSC的小鼠脂肪组织炎症显著更高,同时动脉粥样硬化病变面积也显著增加。此外,与喂食HFC的小鼠相比,喂食HFSC的LDLR-/-小鼠胰岛素抵抗增加,葡萄糖耐量受损。然而,长期喂食(20周)后,喂食HFSC或HFC的LDLR-/-小鼠在炎症和代谢参数以及动脉粥样硬化病变形成方面不再有显著差异。
在高脂饮食中使用高蔗糖而非更复杂的碳水化合物,可显著加速肥胖驱动的代谢并发症的发展以及动脉粥样硬化斑块的形成,同时伴有LDLR-/-小鼠肥胖诱导的脂肪组织炎症。因此,喂食高脂高糖富胆固醇饮食的LDLR-/-小鼠似乎是一种适用于心脏代谢疾病的省时动物模型。此外我们的结果支持了脂肪组织炎症与动脉粥样硬化斑块形成之间的推测关联。