Title
Role of metabolic overload and metabolic inflammation in the development of Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH)
Author
Liang, W.
Publication year
2015
Abstract
Overload of nutrients can lead to diet-induced inflammation, also called metabolic inflammation, which is thought to play an important role in many metabolic diseases, including the development of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). NAFLD encompasses a spectrum of pathologies that range from simple hepatic steatosis to nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and fibrosis. The pathogenesis of NAFLD, including the sequence of events in time and the underlying mechanisms that initiate the transition from a fatty liver to NASH and fibrosis, remain poorly understood. Effective and reliable therapeutic approaches that are based on the understanding of the pathogenesis of NASH are therefore still lacking. In order to gain more insight into the mechanisms of NASH pathogenesis, we started with comparison of human NASH and experimental NASH. Subsequently, we provided evidence that activation of AP-1 and associated neutrophil infiltration is important for NAFL progression towards NASH and this can be induced experimentally by ‘metabolic’ dietary triggers of inflammation.Furthermore, we explored novel nutritional and pharmacological agents as potential strategies to combat NASH. Finally, we investigated the effects of high fat diet-induced metabolic overload on the liver in relation to inflammation in white adipose tissue and kidney, and the dysfunction of these tissues.
Subject
ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences
Life
Healthy Living
Biomedical Innovation
Metabolic syndromes
Fatty liver
Insulin resistance
Dyslipidemia
Fibrosis
NAFLD/NASH
Histology
Pathogensis
Factors
Chronic inflammation
Transcription factors
MHR - Metabolic Health Research
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http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:06d47668-000b-40ac-a152-ef298d84dc09
TNO identifier
536289
Publisher
Universiteit, Leiden
ISBN
9789461089205
Document type
doctoral thesis