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Intestinal Knockout of Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor-Alpha Affects Structural Adaptation but not Liver Injury Following Massive Enterectomy.

Authors :
Phelps, Hannah M.
Swanson, Kerry A.
Steinberger, Allie E.
Guo, Jun
King, Ashley C.
Siddappa, Chidananda Mudalagiriyappa
Davidson, Nicholas O.
Rubin, Deborah C.
Warner, Brad W.
Source :
Journal of Pediatric Surgery; Jun2023, Vol. 58 Issue 6, p1170-1177, 8p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Resection-associated liver steatosis, injury, and fibrosis is a devastating complication associated with massive small bowel resection (SBR). Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha (PPARα) is a key regulator of intestinal lipid transport and metabolism whose expression is selectively increased after SBR. Here we asked if attenuating intestinal PPARα signaling would prevent steatosis and liver injury after SBR. Pparα was deleted selectively in adult mouse intestine using a tamoxifen-inducible Cre-LoxP breeding schema. Mice underwent 50% SBR. At 10 weeks post-operatively, metabolic phenotyping, body composition analysis, in vivo assessment of lipid absorption and intestinal permeability, and assessment of adaptation and liver injury was completed. Pparα intestinal knockout and littermate control mice were phenotypically similar in terms of weight trends and body composition after SBR. All mice demonstrated intestinal adaptation with increased villus height and crypt depth; however, Pparα intestinal knockout mice exhibited decreased villus growth at 10 weeks compared to littermate controls. Liver injury and fibrosis were similar between groups as assessed by serum AST and ALT levels, Sirius Red staining, and hepatic expression of Col1a1 and Acta2. Inducible intestinal deletion of Pparα influences structural adaptation but does not mitigate liver injury after SBR. These findings suggest that enterocyte PPARα signaling in adult mice is dispensable for resection-induced liver injury. The results are critical for understanding the contribution of intestinal lipid metabolic signaling pathways to the pathogenesis of hepatic injury associated with short bowel syndrome. • What is known? Resection-associated liver steatosis, injury, and fibrosis is a devastating complication associated with massive small bowel resection. Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-alpha is a key regulator of lipid transport and metabolism whose expression is selectively increased in the intestine after SBR. • What is new? Inducible intestinal deletion of PPARα, a major regulator of intestinal lipid metabolism, influences structural adaptation but does not mitigate liver injury after SBR. These findings suggest that enterocyte PPARα signaling in adult mice is dispensable for liver injury following SBR. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00223468
Volume :
58
Issue :
6
Database :
Supplemental Index
Journal :
Journal of Pediatric Surgery
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163766179
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2023.02.016