| Literature DB >> 32477116 |
Yu Xu1, Wei Guo1, Cheng Zhang1, Feiyu Chen1, Hor Yue Tan1, Sha Li1, Ning Wang1, Yibin Feng1.
Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a common chronic liver disease with high prevalence in the developed countries. NAFLD has been considered as one of the leading causes of cryptogenic cirrhosis and chronic liver disease. The individuals with obesity, insulin resistance and diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidaemia, and hypertension cardiovascular disease have a high risk to develop NAFLD. The related critical pathological events are associated with the development of NAFLD including insulin resistance, lipid metabolism dysfunction, oxidative stress, inflammation, apoptosis, and fibrosis. The development of NAFLD range from simple steatosis to non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). Hepatic steatosis is characterized by fat accumulation, which represents the early stage of NAFLD. Then, inflammation triggered by steatosis drives early NAFLD progression into NASH. Therefore, the amelioration of steatosis and inflammation is essential for NAFLD therapy. The herbal medicine have taken great effects on the improvement of steatosis and inflammation for treating NAFLD. It has been found out that these effects involved the multiple mechanisms underlying lipid metabolism and inflammation. In this review, we pay particular attention on herbal medicine treatment and make summary about the research of herbal medicine, including herb formula, herb extract and naturals compound on NAFLD. We make details about their protective effects, the mechanism of action involved in the amelioration steatosis and inflammation for NAFLD therapy as well as the clinical application.Entities:
Keywords: fatty acids; herb medicine; inflammation; non-alcoholic fatty liver disease; steatosis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32477116 PMCID: PMC7235193 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2020.00601
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1The lipid mechanistic insight into the anti-NAFLD effects of herbal medicine. NAFLD, Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
Figure 2The inflammatory mechanistic insight into the anti-NAFLD effects of herbal medicine. NAFLD, Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.
The recent research for herb medicine in the setting of NAFLD therapy.
| Herbal Medicine | Source organism | Pharmacological model | Treatment (Pharmacological model and Duration) | Effective Dosage | Reported mechanism of action | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lipogenesis | Modulation of inflammatory parameters | others | |||||
| S-allylmercaptocysteine | Garlic-derived | HFD induced obese rat | i.p, 3 times/week | 200 mg/kg | ↓ | ↓NF-κB and AP-1 | ↓Collagen formation ↓Oxidative stress ↑Autophagy |
| Dioscin | Polygonati Rhizoma | HFD induced obese rats | Orally, | 60 mg/kg | ↓ IκBα, p50 and p65 | ↓Collagen formation | |
| HFD induced obese Wistar rats and mice | Orally, 8 weeks | 15–80mg/kg | ↑SIRT1/AMPK | ↓ | |||
| Dimethylnitrosamine-induced acute liver injury mice | Orally, | 80 mg/kg | ↓LXRα | ↓ | ↓ | ||
| Resveratrol | MCD diet induced NAFLD mice | Orally, | 100 or 250 mg/kg/day | ↓TBARS | ↑ | ||
| AML12 cells | 25, 50, or 100 μmol/L | ↓ FFA uptake. | |||||
| C57BL/6J mice and as ULK1+/− mice with HFD | Orally, 4 weeks. | 50 mg/kg | ↓ IκBα-NF-κB | ↓ | |||
| ↓Fibrosis | |||||||
| Mice with HFD for 4 weeks | Orally, 4 weeks. | 0.40% | ↓ | ||||
| HepG2 cells | 24 h | 20, 40, and 80μM | |||||
| Wistar rats with HFD | Orally, 18 weeks | 200 mg/kg | ↑ cAMP-PRKA-AMPK-SIRT1 | ↓ ER stress(↑SIRT1) | |||
| Naringenin | Citrus-derived flavonoid | LDLR−/− mice with HFD | Orally, 4 weeks | 1% or 3% wt/wt | ↓ VLDL | ↑ insulin resistance | |
| Yangonin | Piper methysticum | Mouse fed with HFD | Orally, 16 weeks | 10, 20, or 40 mg/kg | ↓SREBP-1c pathway;↑ fatty acid β-oxidation | ↑insulin sensitivity | |
| ↓Fibrosis (↑ FXR) | |||||||
| Berberine | Coptidis Rhizoma | Mice fed with HFD | Orally; for 4 weeks | 300 mg/kg/day | ↓ SCD1 | p38MAPK/ERK-COX2 pathways | ↓Fibrosis |
| AML12 | 20 μM | ||||||
| NASH-HCC mice model | Orally, 12 week | 250 mg/kg | |||||
| Betulinic acid | Outer bark of tree species | Mice fed with HFD | Orally, 11 weeks | 50 mg/kg, | ↓ SREBP-1c, ApoC2, RBP4, FAS, and SCD- 1; ↑AMPK ↑ fatty acid oxidation | ↓F4/80, IL-1α, IL-1β, IL-6, TNF-α | ↓Fibrosis (↑ FXR) |
| AML12 treated with palmitic acid (PA) | 50 μg/ml | ||||||
| Mice fed with MCD and HFD | Orally, 6 weeks | 100 mg/100 g diet | |||||
| Glycyrrhizin | Glycyrrhizae Radix Et Rhizoma | Mice fed with MCD diet | i.p, 2 weeks | 50 mg/kg per day | ↓ lipogensis | ↓NLRP3 | |
| ↑FXR | |||||||
| Gastrodin | Larval zebrafish fed with HFD | 10, 25, 50 mg/L | ↓ lipogensis | ↓TNFα, IL-6, and IL1β | ↓Fibrosis ↓TGFβ1) | ||
| Naringenin | Citrus-derived flavonoid | Orally, 4 weeks | 1 or 3% | ↓ SREBP1c; | ↓ hyperinsulinemia | ||
| Puerarin | Mice fed with a high-fat +high-sucrose diet | Orally, 18 weeks | 0.2,0.4g/kg/day | ↓liver steatosis | ↓ | ↓Fibrosis ↓TGFβ1) | |
| Silibinin | MCD diet induced NASH mice | Orally, 6 weeks | 10 and 20 mg/kg/day | ↑ β-oxidation | ↓NASH | ||
| NCTC-1469 cells treated with OA plus PA | 50 and 100 μmol/L | ||||||
| HepG2 cells treated with OA | 5, 20, 50, and 100 μM | ↓PPARα, SREBP-1C and PNPLA3 | ↓NO | ↓glucose uptake (PI3K-AKT) ↓ | |||
| Sparstolonin B | High-fat-fed mice | ip, for 4 week | 3 mg/kg, twice a week | ↓TLR4 lipid raft trafficking | ↓ TLR4 pathway | ↓Fibrosis ↓TGFβ1) | |
| ↓NADPH oxidase activation. | |||||||
| Kupffer cell line | 100 μg/ml | ||||||
| LX2 cells with LPS (100 ng/ml) | 10, 100 μM | ||||||
| Isochlorogenic acid B | Laggera alata (Asteraceae) | Mice fed with MCD diet | Orally, 4 weeks | 5, 10 and 20 mg/kg. | ↓Fibrosis (↓TGFβ1, LXO,MCP-1, COL1α1 and TIMP-1.) | ||
| ↓ oxidative stress (↑Nrf2) | |||||||
| Swertiamarin | Swertia bimaculata | Fructose-fed mice for 12 week | Orally, 4 weeks | 25, 50 and 100 mg/kg | ↓ SREBP-1/FAS/ACC | ↓hepatic pro-inflammation | ↓ hepatic xanthine oxidase (XO) ↑Nrf2 |
| Baicalin | MCD diet-induced NASH | Orally, 4weeks. | 50 and 100,200 mg/kg | ↓ | ↓ inflammation | ↓Fibrosis ↓ hepatic apoptosis. | |
| Ursolic acid(UA) | Mice fed with HFD | Orally, 16 week | 0.05% (w/w) UA diet | ↓Fibrosis | |||
| T090-induced mouse model. | Orally, 7 days | 100, 250 mg/kg/day | Liver X Receptor α antagonist | ||||
| L02 cells treated with PA | 10–30 μg/ml | ↓ lipid accumulation | ↓oxidative stress. | ||||
| Rat fed with HFD | Orally, 6 weeks. | 0.125%, 0.25%, 0.5% UA diet | ↓ inflammation | ↓ insulin resistance | |||
| Andrographolide | Mice fed with CDAA diet | i.p, 22 weeks | 1 mg/kg, 3 times/week | ↓hepatic inflammation | ↓collagen formation | ||
| Fat-laden HepG2 cells. | 50 μM | ↓ NF-κB | |||||
| Ginsenoside Rb1 | Rat fed with HFD | ip | 10 mg/kg | ↑CPT1 | |||
| db/db mice | i.p, 14 days. | 20 mg/kg | ↓ | ↓ | |||
| Nobiletin | Mice fed a high-fat diet | Orally, 16 weeks. | 0.02%, w/w | ↓ NLRP3 | |||
| High glucose induced hepG2 cells | 5, 25, and 50 μM | ↑AMPK | |||||
| Ginsenoside Rb2 | HepG2 cells | 50 µmol/L | ↑Autophagy | ||||
| db/db mice | i.p, 4 weeks | 10 mg/kg | ↑AMPK or SIRT1 | ||||
| Akebia saponin D | ob/ob mice fed with HFD | i.p, 4 weeks | 30,60,120 mg/kg, | ||||
| OA stressed Buffalo rat liver cells | 1, 10, and 100 μM | ↑ LC3-II ↓P62 | |||||
| Glycycoumarin | Rhizoma Glycyrrhizae | PA stressed cells (HepG2, AML-12, and L02) | 10–40μM | ↓Mitochondrial apoptosis(↓GSK-3,↓JNK) | |||
| MCD diet induced NASH mice | i.p. 4 weeks | GCM 15 mg/kg/day | ↓Lipogenesis | ↓Inflammation | ↓ Fibrosis; Oxidative stress | ||
| ethanol extract | HepG2 cells treated with OA plus PA | 250–1000 mg/ml. | ↑PPARα, AMPK ↓SREBP-1c | ||||
| Mice fed with HFD | Orally,14 weeks. | 100 or 200 mg/kg/day | ↓TNF-α | ||||
| Danshen aqueous extract | Mice fed with ethanol | Orally, 9 days | 0.093, 0.28, 0.84 g/kg | ↓Lipogenesis | ↓Inflammation | ↓ Fibrosis | |
| Jwa Kum Whan | Scutellariae Radix and Euodiae Fructus | Mice fed with HFD | Orally, 15 week | 100,200 mg/kg daily | ↑Insulin Signaling | ||
| HepG2 cells | 10, 25, 50, 75, or 100 μg/ml | ||||||
| Ethanol Extract | Mice fed with HFD | Orally, 14 weeks | 100 or 200 mg/kg | ↑ AMPK, PPARα | ↑Insulin Signaling | ||
| 1 mM free fatty acid induced HepG2 cells | 250, 500, 750, or 1000 μg/ml | ↑ AMPK, PPARα | |||||
| honeyberry extract | Mice fed with HFD | Orally, 6 weeks. | 0.5%, 1% | ↑ AMPK, CPT-1,PPARα | |||
| polysaccharides | Rat treated with HFD | Orally, 4 weeks | 1 mg/kg, | ↓lipid accumulation ↑ fatty acid oxidation | |||
| methanolic extract | Rats fed with HFD for 6 weeks | Orally, 6 week | 150, 300, and 600 mg/kg | ↑AMPK, PPARα | ↓Inflammation | ↓apoptosis;↓ oxidative stress;↑insulin sensitive | |
| Seed Extract | Mice fed a HFD | orally, 12 weeks | 300 or 500 mg/g/d, | ↓Lipogenesis | ↓Inflammation | ↑Insulin Signaling | |
| Extract | Wister rats fed with HFD | 56 days | 100 mg/kg/day | ↓ LDLC | ↓Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress | ||
| Total saponins | ApoE-/- mouse fed with HFD. | i.g., 12 weeks. | 75, 150 mg/kg/day | ↓Inflammation | |||
| Total alkaloids | HFD for 8 weeks | orally, 4 weeks | 1.44, 0.72 g/kg | ↓FAS, ACC ↑CPT | |||
| Polygonatum kingianum | Rat fed with HFD | Orally, 14 weeks | 1, 2, 4g/kg | Remedy mitochondrial dysfunction | |||
| Ethyl acetate extract | HFD-induced NASH model | 15 weeks | 2.5 mg/kg | ↓Inflammation | ↓oxidative stress. | ||
| ↓apoptosis | |||||||
| Fructus Schisandrae | SD rats fed with HFD for 8 weeks: | orally, 8 weeks | 0.45% FS+0.3% Atorvastatin | ↓oxidative stress. | |||
| Aqueous extract | Ovariectomized (OVX)+ hyperlipidemic SD rats | Orally, 12 weeks | 600 mg/kg/d | ↓ Fibrosis | |||
| The chloroform extract | SD rats fed with HFD for 6 weeks | Orally, 4 weeks. | ↓ Fibrosis | ||||
| Saponins Raw and processed | i.p | 130 mg/kg | ↓Inflammation | ↓ Fibrosis | |||
| Citrus aurantium Peel Extract | Mice fed with HFD | orally, 8 weeks | 50, 100 mg/kg | ↓PPAR-γ, SREBP-1c | ↓ inflammation | ||
| Korea red ginseng | Fatty Rats | orally, 2 months | 200 mg/kg/day | ↓ inflammation | ↓oxidative stress. | ||
| ApoE(-/-) mice | Orally, 6 weeks | 10.0 g/kg/d | ↑adiponectin | ↓TLR4 and NF-κB p65, TNF-α. | |||
| A guinea pig of NAFLD | Orally, 8 weeks | ↑CYP7A1 and HMGCR | ↓NO and iNOS levels | ||||
| BaiHuJia RenShen Decoction | Anemarrhenae Rhizoma, Gypsum Fibrosum, Glycyrrhizae Radix Et Rhizoma,Ginseng Radix Et Rhizoma | HuS-E/2 cell with PA | ↑P-AMPK;P-ACC; ↓SCD1 ↑CPT | ||||
| db/db mice | orally, 6 weeks | 900 mg/kg | |||||
| BuShenKangShuai tablet | ApoE (-/-) mice | Gavage, 6 weeks | BSKS or atorvastatin | ↑adiponectin ↓TLR4 and NF-κB p65 | |||
| LiGanShiLiuBaWei San | Punica granatum, Cinnamomum cassia, Elettaria cardamomum, Piper longum, Carthamus tinctorius, Amomum tsao-ko | Rat with HFD | Orally, 4 weeks | 0.75 and 1.5 g/kg | ↑PPARα | ↓iNOS levels | |
| HepG2 with FFAs | ↑PPARβ | ||||||
| Hugan Qingzhi tablet | Alismatis Rhizoma, Crataegi Fructus, Typhae Pollen, Nelumbinis Folium, Notoginseng Radix Et Rhizoma | L02 and HepG2 cells induced by FFA | ↑SIRT1 ↓Ac-NF-κB-p65 | ||||
| Rat with HFD | Orally, 12 weeks | 2.16/1.08/0.54 g/kg | |||||
| Sinai san decoction | Bupleuri Radix, Paeoniae Radix, Aurantii Fructus Immaturus, Glycyrrhizae Radix Et Rhizoma | Rat with HFD+CCL4 | Orally, 8 weeks | 0.1 ml/kg/day | ↓ inflammation | ||
| Gegenqinlian Decoction | PuerariaeLobataeRadix, Coptidis Rhizoma, Scutellariae Radix, Glycyrrhizae Radix Et Rhizoma | Rat with HFD | Orally, 8 weeks | 5.04, 10.08 g/kg/day | ↓PPARγ | ||
| Tangzhiqing Decoction | Mori Folium, Nelumbinis, Crataegi Folium, Salviae Miltiorrhizae Radix Et Rhizoma, Paeoniae Radix Rubra | Rat with HFD | Orally, 4 weeks | 540 mg/kg/d | ↓steatosis | ||
| Qushi Huayu Decoction | Artemisiae scopaiae Herba, Polygoni cuspidati Rhizoma Et Radix, Hyperici Japonici Herba, Curcumae longae Rhizoma, Gardenia jasminoides Ellis | Rat with HFD | Orally, 4 weeks | 0.1 ml/kg·d, | ↑AMPK and ACC | ||
| L02 cells | 5%–15% QHD serum | ↓ cellular TG | |||||
| Hugan Qingzhi tablet | Alismatis Rhizoma, Crataegi Fructus, Typhae Pollen, Nelumbinis Folium, Notoginseng Radix Et Rhizoma | Rat with HFD | Orally, | 10% HQT-medicated serum | ↓ | ↓IL-6, ↓P65 | |
| 90 mg/kg, combination with calorie restriction | |||||||
| Lingguizhugan decoction | Poria, Ramulus Cinnamomi, Atractylodis Macrocephalae Rhizoma,Glycyrrhizae Radix Et Rhizoma | Mice with HFD | 16 weeks | Fecal microbiota transplantation | ↓ | ||
| Tangshen formula | Puerariae Radix, Astragalus, Ligustrum lucidum Ait, Ganoderma, Salvia miltiorrhizae Radix Et Rhizoma, Rhei Radix Et Rhizoma | Mice with HFD | Orally, 16 weeks | 2.4 g/kg/day | ↑AMPK/SIRT1 | ||
| HepG2 cells | 25, 50, 100 μg/ml | ||||||
| Fenofibrate and Xuezhikang | Rat fed with HFD | Orally, 6 weeks | F (100 mg/kg) and X (300 mg/kg) | ↑PPARα | ↓TNF-α. | ||
| Bangpungtongseong-san | Talcum, Glycyrrhiza uralensis,Gypsum, Scutellaria baicalensis, Platycodon grandiflorum, Ledebouriella seseloides, Cnidium officinale, Angelica gigas,Paeonia lactiflora,Rheum undulatum, Ephedra sinica, Mentha pulegium, Forsythia koreana, Erigeron canadensis, Schizonepeta tenuifolia, Atractylodes japonica, Gardenia jasminoides, Zingiber officinale | HFD induced obese mice | 12 weeks | 1.5% w/w | ↑ mitochondrial function | antioxidant | |
Figure 3Herbal medicine mediated the key pathological events in the procession of NAFLD. NAFLD, Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease.