| Literature DB >> 31599067 |
Aimo Kannt1,2, Efstathia Papada3, Claire Kammermeier1, Giuseppe D'Auria4, Nuria Jiménez-Hernández4, Martin Stephan1, Uwe Schwahn1, Andreas Nygaard Madsen5, Mette Viberg Østergaard5, George Dedoussis3, M Pilar Francino4.
Abstract
SCOPE: As a result of the obesity epidemic, the prevalence of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is increasing. No drug is approved for the treatment of NASH. In this study, the effect of a nutritional supplement, Mastiha or Chios mastic gum, on metabolic and histological parameters and on the gut microbiome in mice with NASH and fibrosis was investigated. METHODS ANDEntities:
Keywords: Chios mastic gum; Mastiha; NASH; fibrosis; gut microbiome; non-alcoholic steatohepatitis
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31599067 PMCID: PMC7003480 DOI: 10.1002/mnfr.201900927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Nutr Food Res ISSN: 1613-4125 Impact factor: 5.914
Figure 1a) Study layout. b) Body weight change (% of day 0) throughout the treatment period. c) Twenty‐four hour food intake recorded daily throughout the study period. d) Plasma ALT and e) plasma AST levels at termination of the study. Values are mean of n = 10–11 ± SEM. * p < 0.05; *** p < 0.001 compared to NASH vehicle.
Figure 2a) Liver weight, b) liver triglycerides, and c) liver total cholesterol at study termination. d) Total liver lipid content, e) hepatic col1a1, and f) hepatic galectin‐3 quantified by morphometry. n = 10–11 ± SEM. * p < 0.05; ** p < 0.01; *** p < 0.001 compared to NASH vehicle.
Figure 3a) Representative images of liver morphology at termination of the study. H&E staining (20×, scale bar = 100 µm), b) Picrosirius Red staining (20×, scale bar = 100 µm). c) Change in NAFLD activity score (pre‐ versus posttreatment) for individual animals in the different treatment groups: Lean control mice (grey), mice on NASH diet (black), and mice on NASH diet supplemented with 0.2% Chios mastic gum (green), d) NAFLD activity score for the different treatment groups at study termination. e) Change in fibrosis score. N = 10–11 per group, ** p < 0.01 versus NASH vehicle group (nonparametric two‐sided Wilcoxon's test).
Figure 4a) Faith's phylogenetic diversity (PD) index of the gut microbiota at different sequence coverages. Microbial diversity is partially recovered under Mastiha‐supplemented diet in NASH mice. b) Differences in taxonomic composition of the gut microbiota by study group: PCoA‐based on the Jaccard distance. c) Barplot of taxonomic composition at bacterial class level, showing the decrease in Bacteroidia and increase in Deltaproteobacteria abundance in NASH‐ and Mastiha‐treated mice.
Figure 5Heatmap of microbial taxa log‐scaled abundances by study group (sample mean centered around zero) and dendrogram of clustering by taxon co‐occurrence. Abundance balances were calculated as log‐abundance ratios between the groups of taxa separated by each dendrogram partition. The deepest partitions in the clustering dendrogram are indicated (y0 to y9).