Diet-induced obesity in zebrafish shares common pathophysiological pathways with mammalian obesity.

Q1 Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Takehiko Oka, Yuhei Nishimura, Liqing Zang, Minoru Hirano, Yasuhito Shimada, Zhipeng Wang, Noriko Umemoto, Junya Kuroyanagi, Norihiro Nishimura, Toshio Tanaka
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引用次数: 297

Abstract

Background: Obesity is a multifactorial disorder influenced by genetic and environmental factors. Animal models of obesity are required to help us understand the signaling pathways underlying this condition. Zebrafish possess many structural and functional similarities with humans and have been used to model various human diseases, including a genetic model of obesity. The purpose of this study was to establish a zebrafish model of diet-induced obesity (DIO).

Results: Zebrafish were assigned into two dietary groups. One group of zebrafish was overfed with Artemia (60 mg dry weight/day/fish), a living prey consisting of a relatively high amount of fat. The other group of zebrafish was fed with Artemia sufficient to meet their energy requirements (5 mg dry weight/day/fish). Zebrafish were fed under these dietary protocols for 8 weeks. The zebrafish overfed with Artemia exhibited increased body mass index, which was calculated by dividing the body weight by the square of the body length, hypertriglyceridemia and hepatosteatosis, unlike the control zebrafish. Calorie restriction for 2 weeks was applied to zebrafish after the 8-week overfeeding period. The increased body weight and plasma triglyceride level were improved by calorie restriction. We also performed comparative transcriptome analysis of visceral adipose tissue from DIO zebrafish, DIO rats, DIO mice and obese humans. This analysis revealed that obese zebrafish and mammals share common pathophysiological pathways related to the coagulation cascade and lipid metabolism. Furthermore, several regulators were identified in zebrafish and mammals, including APOH, IL-6 and IL-1β in the coagulation cascade, and SREBF1, PPARα/γ, NR1H3 and LEP in lipid metabolism.

Conclusion: We established a zebrafish model of DIO that shared common pathophysiological pathways with mammalian obesity. The DIO zebrafish can be used to identify putative pharmacological targets and to test novel drugs for the treatment of human obesity.

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斑马鱼的饮食性肥胖与哺乳动物肥胖具有共同的病理生理途径。
背景:肥胖是一种受遗传和环境因素影响的多因素疾病。需要动物肥胖模型来帮助我们理解这种情况下的信号通路。斑马鱼在结构和功能上与人类有许多相似之处,并被用来模拟各种人类疾病,包括肥胖的遗传模型。本研究旨在建立斑马鱼饮食性肥胖(DIO)模型。结果:斑马鱼被分为两个饮食组。一组斑马鱼被过量喂食青蒿(60毫克干重/天/条),这是一种由相对高脂肪组成的活猎物。另一组斑马鱼饲喂足以满足其能量需求的青蒿(5 mg干重/天/条)。斑马鱼按照这些饮食方案喂养8周。过量喂食青蒿的斑马鱼表现出与对照斑马鱼不同的体重指数(通过体重除以体长的平方来计算)、高甘油三酯血症和肝骨化症的增加。在8周的过度喂养期后,对斑马鱼进行2周的热量限制。热量限制改善了增加的体重和血浆甘油三酯水平。我们还对DIO斑马鱼、DIO大鼠、DIO小鼠和肥胖人类的内脏脂肪组织进行了比较转录组分析。该分析表明,肥胖斑马鱼和哺乳动物具有共同的凝血级联和脂质代谢相关的病理生理途径。此外,在斑马鱼和哺乳动物中发现了多个调节因子,包括凝血级联中的APOH、IL-6和IL-1β,以及脂质代谢中的SREBF1、PPARα/γ、NR1H3和LEP。结论:我们建立了与哺乳动物肥胖具有共同病理生理通路的斑马鱼DIO模型。DIO斑马鱼可用于识别假定的药理学靶点和测试治疗人类肥胖的新药。
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来源期刊
BMC Physiology
BMC Physiology Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Physiology
CiteScore
9.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: BMC Physiology is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in cellular, tissue-level, organismal, functional, and developmental aspects of physiological processes. BMC Physiology (ISSN 1472-6793) is indexed/tracked/covered by PubMed, MEDLINE, BIOSIS, CAS, EMBASE, Scopus, Zoological Record and Google Scholar.
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