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Publication : Atherogenic diet-induced hepatitis is partially dependent on murine TLR4.

First Author  Desai MS Year  2008
Journal  J Leukoc Biol Volume  83
Issue  6 Pages  1336-44
PubMed ID  18334542 Mgi Jnum  J:136848
Mgi Id  MGI:3797194 Doi  10.1189/jlb.0607390
Citation  Desai MS, et al. (2008) Atherogenic diet-induced hepatitis is partially dependent on murine TLR4. J Leukoc Biol 83(6):1336-44
abstractText  Diets high in cholesterol and cholate such as the Paigen diet have been used to study atherogenesis, lithogenesis, and proinflammatory microvascular changes induced by nutritional hypercholesterolemia. Although these diets lead to chronic hepatic inflammation and fibrosis, the early inflammatory changes have been poorly characterized. TLR4, a known receptor for LPS, is also a receptor for a variety of endogenous ligands and has been implicated in atheroma formation. Here, we specifically examined the early inflammatory response of the liver to the atherogenic (ATH) diet and the possible contribution of TLR4. Animals fed the high-cholesterol/cholate diet for 3 weeks developed a significant, predominantly mononuclear leukocyte infiltration in the liver, hepatic steatosis, elevated hepatic expression of MCP-1, RANTES, and MIP-2, and increased serum levels of liver enzymes. In TLR4-deleted animals, there was a 30% attenuation in the serum alanine transaminase levels and a 50% reduction in the leukocyte infiltration with a fourfold reduction in chemokine expression. In contrast, hepatic steatosis did not differ from wild-type controls. TLR2 deletion had no effect on diet-induced hepatitis but increased the amount of steatosis. We conclude that the early inflammatory liver injury but not hepatic lipid loading induced by the ATH diet in mice is mediated in part by TLR4.
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