| Literature DB >> 27072576 |
Jian Wu1,2.
Abstract
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) comprises a spectrum of liver disorders with fat accumulation from simple fatty liver, nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), fibrosis/cirrhosis and NAFLD/NASH-associated hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). NASH is a progressive form of NAFLD and requires medical attention. One of 5-10 NASH patients may progress to end-state liver disease (ESLD or cirrhosis) in 5-10 years; meanwhile, life-threatening complications of ESLD and HCC account for major mortality. An increasing burden of NAFLD in clinics, elucidation of its pathogenesis and progression, and assessment of the efficacy of potential therapeutics demand reliable animal models. Most NASH-associated HCC occurs in cirrhotic subjects; however, HCC does appear in NASH patients without cirrhosis. Lipotoxicity, oxidant stress, insulin resistance, endoplasmic reticulum stress, altered adipokine and lymphokine profiles and gut microbiome changes affect NAFLD progression and constitute key pathobiologic interplays. How these factors promote malignant transformation in a microenvironment of steatotic inflammation and fibrosis/cirrhosis, and lead to development of neoplasms is one of critical questions faced in the hepatology field. The present review summarizes the characteristics of emerging rodent NASH-HCC models, and discusses the challenges in utilizing these models to unveil the mysteries of NASH-associated HCC development.Entities:
Keywords: NASH-associated hepatocellular carcinoma (NASH-HCC); end-stage liver disease; nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27072576 PMCID: PMC5173170 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.8641
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Development, progression and prognosis of NAFLD from SFL to end-stage liver disease (ESLD) in humans
Cardiovascular and diabetic disorders and their complications may account for a large portion of morbidity and mortality in patients with obese, diabetes and metabolic syndrome. A micrograph of NAFLD was obtained from an individual who had an abdominal surgical procedure with permission. A histologic micrograph of NASH-HCC was from a pathologically confirmed NASH patient after surgical resection. The collection of patient specimens was approved by the institutional ethic committee. Liver transplantation is the only established therapy for ESLD and HCC. Given the scarcity of donor livers, only a small fraction of candidates qualified for liver transplantation will eventually receive transplantation before deterioration. Life-threatening complications of ESLD include portal hypertension (PH), liver failure (LF), bleeding, hepatic renal syndrome (HRS), hepatic encephalopathy (HE), spontaneous bacterial peritonitis (SBP), and multiple organ failure (MOF). The numbers besides arrows in the figure are the rates of possible transition or transformation. NAFLD = nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; NASH-HCC = nonalcoholic steatohepatitis-associated hepatocellular carcinoma; NASH = nonalcoholic steatohepatitis; SFL = simple fatty liver.
Rodent models of NASH-associated HCC
| Name of models | Species or genetic background | Diet or agents used to induce NAFLD/NASH | Inducing duration | Description of hepatic neoplasms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTEN-null mice [ | AlbCrePtenflox/flox mice | Spontaneous formation of NASH and HCC | NASH in 10 wks and HCC in 40 wks. | Hepatocellular and/or cholangio-carcinoma |
| ALR-null mice [ | AlbCre ALRflox/flox mice | Spontaneous formation of liver inflammation, steatosis and neoplasms | Necroinflammation at 4 wks, steatosis, fibrosis at 8 wks and HCC at 1 year. | Nodular foci of high-grade dysplasia after 6 months, liver tumors in 70% of mice within 1 year, and 60% of them are HCC. |
| MC4R-deficient mice [ | MC4R-knock-out strain | HFC diet for 12 months | 5 months for NASH. 12 months for HCC | Well-differentiated HCC seen in 5/5 mice at 12 months of feeding. |
| Mice fed CD-HFD [ | Regular mouse strain | Choline-deficient high fat diet | NASH develops at 5-6 months, HCC develops at 12 months | HCC in 19 of 75 mice within 1 year of induction. Tumor types are heterogeneous. |
| Mice with iron metabolism defect [ | 129S1/SvImJ strain | HFC diet plus high fructose and glucose in drinking water | 52 wks | HCC in 8/9 mice, rest with hepatic adenoma. |
| Mice fed MCD diet [ | Regular mouse strains | Methionine/choline deficient diet | 4-6 months | Steatohepatitis at 4 wks, fibrosis at 8 wks, and HCC at 20-26 wks. |
| STAM model of NASH-fibrosis-HCC [ | New born mice | Sequential induction with streptozotocin and HFC diet | NASH occurs at 8 wks, and HCC at 20 wks | HCC in diabetic mice without insulin resistance |
| Rat model of steatosis, fibrosis/cirrhosis and HCC [ | Rats | Choline-deficient plus high trans-fat diet, DEN in drinking water | 16 wks | Steatohepatitis & fibrosis in 7/7, cirrhosis in 6/7, HCC in 7/7, and cholangio-carcinoma in 1/7 |
| Rat model of NASH-cirrhosis-HCC [ | Rats | Choline-deficient amino acid-defined diet | 48 weeks | 54.6% rats developed HCC on the basis of cirrhosis during 48 weeks of feeding. HCC is positive for HIF-α1 and VEGF. |
| Sedentary ALIOS model [ | Mouse | A custom diet containing trans-fatty acids and HFCS plus sedentary lifestyle | Typical NASH at 16 wks, 12 months for an advanced stage | NASH, fibrosis/cirrhosis in all mice. 50% developed neoplasms with half microscopic lesions with evidence of progenitor activation. |
ALIOS = American (sedentary) lifestyle-induced obesity syndrome; ALR = argumenter of liver regeneration; CD-HFD = choline-deficient high fat diet; DEN = diethylnitrosamine; HFCS = high-fructose corn syrup; HFC = high fat/high Clarrie; HIF-1α = hypoxia-inducible factor-1α; MCD = methionine/choline deficient; MC4R = Melanocortin 4 receptor; PTEN = Phosphatase and tensin homolog; VEGF = vascular endothelial growth factor; wks = weeks.