Obesity-Associated Hyperuricemia in Female Mice: A Reevaluation.

Gout, urate, and crystal deposition disease Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-08-30 DOI:10.3390/gucdd2030019
Andrew P Giromini, Sonia R Salvatore, Brooke A Maxwell, Sara E Lewis, Michael R Gunther, Marco Fazzari, Francisco J Schopfer, Roberta Leonardi, Eric E Kelley
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Abstract

Many preclinical reports have coalesced to identify a strong association between obesity and increased levels of uric acid (UA) in tissues and, importantly in the circulation (hyperuricemia). Unfortunately, nearly all these studies were conducted with male mice or, in one case, female mice without a side-by-side male cohort. Therefore, the relationship between obesity and hyperuricemia in female mice remains undefined. This lack of clarity in the field has considerable impact as the downstream effects of obesity and allied hyperuricemia are extensive, resulting in many comorbidities including cardiovascular dysfunction, chronic kidney disease and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). Herein we begin to address this issue by revealing phenotypic and metabolic responses to diet-induced obesity (DIO) in a side-by-side male vs. female C57BL/6J study. Beginning at 6 weeks of age, mice were exposed to either an obesogenic diet (60% calories from fat) or control diet (10% calories from fat) for 19 weeks. Similar to numerous reported observations with the 60% diet, male mice experienced significant weight gain over time, elevated fasting blood glucose, impaired glucose tolerance and significantly elevated circulating uric acid levels (2.54 ± 0.33 mg/dL) compared to age-matched lean male controls (1.53 ± 0.19 mg/dL). As expected, the female mice experienced a slower rate of weight gain compared to the males; however, they also developed elevated fasting blood glucose and impaired glucose tolerance compared to age-matched lean controls. Countervailing our previous report whereby the control diet for the female-only study was vivarium standard chow (18% calories from fat), the obese female mice did demonstrate significantly elevated circulating UA levels (2.55 ± 0.15 mg/dL) compared to the proper control (1.68 ± 0.12 mg/dL). This affirms that the choice of control diet is crucial for reaching durable conclusions. In toto, these results, for the first time, reveal elevated circulating UA to be a similar long-term response to obesogenic feeding for both males and females and mirrors clinical observations demonstrating hyperuricemia in obesity for both sexes.

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